College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 336
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 336 of the 1967 volume:
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'f+Ti2f,1.a,lf,,',-- Rf'A--'ww F' The Students of the College of the Holy Cross P7f'6S67fll . . . 4 ' P Academics . 4 Organizations . . , 26 Entertainment . . 38 Publications . . . 50 Government and Honors . . 58 Fall Sports . 66 Winter Sports . . 80 Spring Sports . - 96 U ndergraafnates . . . 1 14 Seniors . . . 146 we IQ 1 '95 -if, iv' , f ,f ,,,,.4u1 The teacher nho zmllef in the fhadow of the temple among hzk follonfemg giver not of hzk mkdom hut rather of hzlr faith and hzk lowngneff If he Zlf z'no'eeez7 Wire he doef not hzkt' you enter the home of hzk wzlrdom, hut rather leeldf you to the threfhold ofyour own 7711-1251 Kahlil Gibran Academics S A . s u ' 5 1 ? Y' ,J - X 21. ,Q ,mv . . .i-.Wzf 1 Q Qf1' f4 1 'P ' - Af I gmc- - vw- 'A I 1 I Q, 6 ..'MW..s.-fn I A Q 1 Y . .' wi-fJ4A.': W'-. A 'R Q 'wer A .4 ,ww .f , . Q: .. 4 , h ,xi ,., ' ifwff T-If q,f'3'7 ' ' . v. ' If fx, Tw 1' . if ' Q J ' ' -' 4, S h'1f?'?sQ .75,f' ,g,:5 1 H .qgwfyp 1 b- , , ' , V- W 1. , 4 fh -ze - Y :gf fn -' , ' V ' .,,,......x.-.M 'hz - -- , . f M -.., M- , .. N 0, H,-4. +.4-wa.-wvqm's1umvu..u ,mffwx-g vwggwf 1-at-.W Q, fi ff 1 U V fy.-.-W ..wyW-17ff:-.- A' - -.gg M-1: . zz-:., -f:-- .,,, rv-f - v4.u :::vvS:-- ' W-'means-an ---.f'-Onan-ug. ! .Nw 5'5- ,J . fr 4 nf ,L . 43556 ' ff? . , if-ig I 'HW' S v 6' 1- is 'v I , 1. .. . -M5 Q 1 , Aifif. ,,,- , I QQ. 13' fix x ff-: ? V fcffh' :'AF', , V 1 -rn , J-. 3 ,-puff.. . , , ,, ..'zf,f 1 aq.-.5.' 5 wx , . , ,, , - . .. ,, ...::-J-5 ...W- Q. ,.' nu, if The liheral art: college, df it: name implief, .rtandf in a unique hixtorical relationfhip to the cauxe of human freedom. From its remote heginningy in ancient Greece, it haf heen identifed with man'J queft for a more human life, and confequently for thofe freedom:-political, Jocial, intellectual and perfonal-that make such a life poysihle. lt if not Jurprifing, then, that tenfiony of freedom and authority, of initiative and ohedience, of creativity and tradition, have heen felt here jirxt and more keenly than anywhere elre. R.j.S. fl f if , I .X 1 A 5 Q. I 'NJ Qs' But talent ix common, too-it'.r all around uf, only moft of the time it get: waxted. The matter are lumpy with talent, as I keep Jaying. You juft can't judge the in- telligence, the talent of the American maffex hy talking with them,' you'ue got to work with them to know that. Eric Hoffer .. t . 'vs .r . W r ,INF 4 YW , F55 . L 'hr Aide To live effectively if to luue with adequate information. Thus, corn- rnunication and control belong to the eyxence of maniv inner life, even as they belong to hif life in Jociety. Norbert Wiener Vatican Council ll give! a frefh inxight into our Chriftian vocation-an invitation to a loving perfonal involvement with our fellow man, meaxured only hy the inyinite love of Chrift. The hext rexponxe ix coming from the prefent generation of young men and women. J. F. D. . um te, nal 'lv Educated man should he very much con- cerned about the whole mankind, not just hvmfelf or a few around him. Our thoughtf, our pronouncementx, and our actionf Jhould reflect this concern. Love if a hetter word for it. B. T. L. ina.-P I S ee - '-0 pn O1 xf' L 1 ,,,f, , I - - au. -Q 5 - ' '53 if P! ' :.' gi 3 Q P L A: f. V ft X Q K 9 I , N '- ' : ,Q 0 A 'ever to excel and to he pre-eminent among otherf' CHomer, Iliad VI 2089 It ix thif hind of competition-the Strife which Hefiod dejinef df a force not hoftile among men, hut wholexome for them CWorks and Days 11-265 -which governed the Greek: of long ago. It haf alfo governed you-in athletic competition and academic achievement. 'Ever to excel and to he pre-eminent among otherJ.' lf: a demanding principle to follow. May it now, though never at the expenfe of charity or humility, guide your live: and your conduct. W. I.. Mud ' , Heat, ofkmltt, A liberal education is the Jteady trimming away of the :net of prejudice. The clafyroom if only a minor inytrament for tlaif daily opera- tion,' ideally, the :harp edge of .fpirit and mind yearning for freedom in trntlo if the better tool. F. P. 3495. 571' a L k lf 3' uf., A dv. -Qin 4 -1 ,Q 51.1 if 2' 'Qmfw .M 'X -wiv Q e 1 5 1 4 . X .,, 'Q 4 IW- L? ' ii I if ,i l' ,fi Y X 'f ' i .'- ., 4 w x -w5'?15.f-'ww -vis' 3732? 'r':?fi':ff,2-. - 2.-'l'2Sff'fi: 'if ' ' . T JE 5 13 's 2-. Q, 41- 'Gif The role of the teacher . . . to .fpencl him- .relf and to he .fpent . . . to challenge ever anew . . . to cattfe and to witneff the trem- hlingx of the Jpirit . . . to Jing a new Jong to a new generation and to Jing an olcl Jong in a new way . . . to pnfh toward excellence and to Jtrive towarcl cliftant horizonf, ay yet ztncharteci, in the excitement ancl adventure that if learning, that ix teaching, that if being. J. H. M. 13 W. V si-I 'au xi . 1 I Ck S' A ww .tim TM GXJYLQQQLMJX. The ethical goal: of a Holy Cross education should he defcrihed in their New England context ay well ay through their Catholic heritage. Therefore, I accept a.r a uiahle philofophy of education that which halances a Chriftian Jenfe of community with an Emerfonian Jelf-reliance. E.J.C. fi ' fNv7 -'H'2::..'r-- . ,fgggf-rf. ,f V' .,f iff ' ' ,- 14' -Q ,ff 5 7 'fy' l if -4-W 1 . - V f-vf.ffQ A' t K Ji, -f'-X. vjf x i 'K . s'-19 If ,LQ n I X X 3 1 x' A' 41 . 5 L Q x f , f P s of 1 144 f 3 I K 'X f f l-.,....S-,E-J, M Qfx-5 , 4 M X j X X: 4-1-.-,.,- , --..-.. aA1:ia1: Y p A . .. .-....- ...-..-... .-.... Noi by yemzr but by difpofizion is wifdom acquired Plautus ef fl. 'uf' Qs, x I 1 UMQJ CQMCBVMM I 0 I It ix by no meaner enougb tbat an officer of tbe Navy Jboulcl be a capable rnariner. He muft be tbat of courxe, but alxo a great deal more. He .rbould be af well af a gentle- man of liberal education, refined mannerf, punctiliouf courtesy, and tbe nicext .tense of perfonal bonor. John Paul Jones - -ll? 5 'x 5 I 41- 'fa VV' I . Q Q Z 'N t .,, x I , . .N,,t,.i bu.. ' un ,1- ,t-,Faqs .Avi W ve The hafiy of every philofophy and indeed of all harnan endeavor lie: in option as well at viyion and has little or nothing to do with the verifiable. C. V. 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' f: ik uw f w ' 4 :'1,'g-'fir ' N aw fzwvlzff rf J wJ',x ,' f:.,w.f1,f Qfvm-4 f 'V .vmefpm ,S 1 1 x , 4., Y H rf ff- w,,vf Q ff:-,,,, P, , K-f M ff-win M. .V-f-,wfmfi 5, M-,a.,W.Wwiff f pw 1: ' -y fry'-1 J 59-Q M ,Y ,ey f f :z7y1,.s,f':2,f,,,1 2,1-if 'fr - f Aflfw ff 159, g'Q+3 A-'fir ,'f',f4,g fx yfzf 5 K 1 , -'EMM f- 2 , Q vig 1, yfngf-igyfegfzglk, ,gi f.y,g5f,?,,.,f , ,y,fffy,,,.A lfAgg yas3 Qsyf ' ff.g9g..f 4,g,43v,gzw,y1,fvZf 1, 7,6 11' fig! gp, 'Cy QW?-1 51,69 1, Q '.!f'--f.f,2fyA,r 533172662-if ffvjfy - J Qi' ff 4 f-L f' 'fwwnf ff-,V fvff UVM' ' ' 'f' w f ,-' 35 f A, if nf 'v Af f 7 4 fy-f,wff,wsffxffMW f, fwf,f,f ff ww' 3240 ,ff f xf gf X , ff 4 ff? ,Y 4,'A,Q'g9,,f? ,W J, J ., V 1 1, 5, ,7 :f Q1 'J ' . uf: - fifggffv ffv ' 'iff ' 1-gy V55 f f WM 1, -ff' 'Y if Q f ww . :3w,m,f 1g ,gin ,ff If, fpffgfry gfg im J, , ' .1 W egjgegygggyigiffigvfaff ,f?,?2f,?S,ixif,.,fg. ,ff .Ma g . 52 6, gf . was Y Q . ' f' '7 ' fu ' Q S. .Q ff I 35:42 5 , Vf qv' 7 4 1 . , ,V f ,ff A f A 'fff ,, ,, . M, ,nz , 5. . r- .V - .- ' + -an ' f N ' z5Tf1fc..fawS,:'Y vi f ' ' ' - X? 5. Q.: xx -5 A3 fx, M.. ,, , . mf, - 1 I ' gg ff 'Kr My u ,gi V, L- 1 Q my-fy Tig: 4, -A Xu' , N. . H .,,.4':.' ff.. A 3 L- , Try not to become 4 man of success but mzfber try to become a man 0 value. 5 N Albert Einstein Z5 , N4 fZfm1WW13 Ealztcation for oar time can offer few anrwerx of c0n,reqitence,' it can inxtract in the ways of doubt, tliuent and inqairy and it Jhoaltl convey a toler- ance for the ancertaintiey :itch inftrnction breeclf. What we really neeal, after all, if an ability to final anal Jtay with the right qiteftionf. R.P.j. I A jffw tx 23 J x is I 1 N M N Z' RW wi The real theological qnextiony are alwayx con- temporary, ancl can he effectively clealt with only hy someone who is Jenfitine to the activity of the Spirit within the Chnrch. 24 J, B. B. 5' 44 1 K X . We as men, or the invitation may fail in that we make Clarift obfcnreg but in our brief momentf of candor, we know that He if there. R. E. I.. X NVQ'-i.o'g' ' 'Max '42 5,9 'I --. -'vie '-mf-fc. .- rw? 4.1 .- - -vii-Qf,fp5 . ' 2' '- sci 'far' fl i p:wC5 .gg,.g2' A - . , . --3,1 gf-'?'ri:'?-:EFL-1 df . ' . ff f g,, f'i-:'tz'o,'4i-',- ,g,,Sf e . U '3 1. 514- , 1.431-A'-sa ,A - .SQA K, -4:5 5 - ., hr.: 33- ,an gv-4 ' 'i I , ,Q . AJ: ' 4 if - - 5, .- -'-- el- 4 i . .Cp Q4 6 20' ? lv- 5: ' .- 'tr 3 W- N. ' 1 -af ' ' ' .,, M..- . , I 4. Q Q n .XQJM -e - A 'f . 'AQ -- v l- H for - 5-QLQQ . ' S 4 ,' - - gr. .. .A'- '1 - R- I. '-. , 'ifsli -, 2.14-nfl,- 3 - ,ev - A f 2... -- 'a . '- cg - ii- J-f O I 1 Q t ' 49 ' - f' , I - - Q. ' - ' .lf -mp- hl ' ,ls vi' , is 1 9 'Q Q11 lil lil ,L ni 9 :rif . 1 Q im in ' e fy ' a'1 .s-N., if 1 . '50 lim' 'Q- ,Q I -I 1 Wgth hauntea' hearty thru the heat ana' cola' We rzever thought we could ever get olah HQ thought we eoula' fit forever in fun But our eharteey realb way a milliort to 0716 Bob Dylan Urgamaa tiom Biology Society Ned Bartlett, Jim Owens, Tony Proto, Torn Mullins. gym Cross and Crucible Standing: Charlie Bau- mann, Torn Gilligan, Bill Pandolfe, Ed Fruin, Bob Fissmer. Seated: John Bentley. Physics Society ., 5 , ,.-ee-Quik ath Club C.C.D. 5 . Senior Brother Program vvi.HE'l5' f? ,Z ' ,Tn-gf , , .1 . :Q , 5 r. x nov fi.: .F ff , , :arg L- Sf351.,:k,4 1,55 , ' 4 ,ig-i.1?-Y?-:fi I .Url 'U -1, K' 'ft W Y Q , V. Jerry Corrigan, Jim Lawlor, Tim Iette. .4-. 3' 19: U95- Tirn Phalan, jay O'Brien, Larry Damian, Frank Godek lr-'-s:z.f,.J--- ' x 4 Pete Smith, Mike Drain, Tumbler, Buzz McCarthy. Kgs .e,, ff 1 I Emerald Shield Society Tom Hogan, Tom Flynn, Jerry Corrigan. Zh I.R.C. Young Democrats Top row: Peter Singleton, Frank Callahan, Stephen Harbeck, Gerry Corrigan, Allan Uckman, Donald Studley, Donald O'Connor, Michael Connor, Wil- liam McEachern. Pint Row: John Glennon, Ken- neth Neumann, Armand Picardi, Michael Shoen. s, qyv. T Q . 1317? Q - 1 Q 2-----4 1 e Ll- .3- f X., Hs. ...g 9 ,gr - 'I x ' x s . WL... , x'- zi ' , .-.3 :J l. A6 -' Vsiifs Y L 'te ' f e N e- 'Q-F H O -1- f ig ames Mad1son A, A- ',,.-,.k:-352. 'L A J V' E- 5' , S 0 T'--if f . ,. h F1 OC1Cty Alan Tarr, john Kwapisz, John Glennon, john McCabe, john Nugent, Alan Frenzel. john Glennon, John Steuerwald, Pete Przybyla. YOH11 R bl' i Q epu 1cans f w Q25 I, 43 Cross and Scroll Dick Pedersen, Roland Brenninkrneyer 34 Bob Bott Q. Debating Zxwlgf' .,- ,, Dennis Egan Pat Collins . W, 'll i4 ,17- Xj.5, 's 'xx H 1' 1.-f - '-- .Q - X. 15-ff -2 1.4 f aiwfin nf- ' Av x'f.jQr.QgS + .A 1 'jing ' Ks. . A:Wfa'?i .' xv- 'fb N -fs, 35.5. ,As ' , , 2, af .3 .N-lik, i VK! Z X31 K nv- .VA .Z ,HMV X 9V'5.r'.1.-f' ,N fv wwf .W . iggvfkgv ' , 5f4v?.t3'f if - -, .4 --xr 1:4-jr Rug-5 ' Iv, M-,J , -. .g -. X. sn, ...xx . J '-1 . A' fi . : '-' 4:6 We ... X 'Sf' af' Q X Yr, -J 'if i g Th ,'xk ,r i... S d l' Larry Corbett, John Baldovin, Father I.aBran, john Endres, Carl Gartner, Bill Hays, Ed Mahoney, Bill Pierce, John Firmi X , v ,4-.ffl . Y I - , , .IL-r W.. v urple Key Society ps 1- 2 Standing: Gene Sisco, Torn Haley, John Siridoni. Seatedg Tom Fitzpatrick, Jim Brett, Mike Hart, George Horton, Bill Blum, John Power, Hugh O'Ma1ley, jim Casey, Pete Kimener. X . , 1, 'X E Q 1 L 2 37 IO . .Mr i'E'f.,fg ?1?x'3'- , ' 1. 1' 'f 53,5152 ,.',. vi ' ij! 7-555-5 ,,,,,i,. 4-1 5' .:: rx-T' .., 4 y??,0k , .,, .AX 11 1 N ae., 1' ff, 1 'JE 4 rs ' V, .rv , :.f.,. , f .iAZ '17Q?'r5 .55 - 'ff' ,I Ei-Q-.lin : '51 :gg - jg rg. A :ggi yu The man that laettb no mufie in ' M bimfea 44-1- Nor tk not moved with eoneom' of mfeet foundg If fit for treetfontg ftmtetgemf and Jlpoilx Shakespeare Entertainment Top row: Mike Scott, Art Steele, Pete Smith, Jim Con- lan. Front rowg Bob Pascucci, Mi. Reznicek, Mr. Herson, Hugh D'Ambrosio. Drama Q P' U .PY y,,,!l, Kf I, iw I 1' g A ,- I- f' fgm Quit D00 W 41 1843 Club L..-1 R.-,7 H V 'Af X X, L Gene Keogh, Kevin Condron, jay McLaughlin, Paul Kelleher, Bill Earls, Tom Kelly, Torn Mainville, Paul Lynch. 42 . , Ju. p - 3 . l - I M .4 '14 ' ' v ' 1 . 4 ndfif' ' fa 1 Pi w ...G .,-, 1 , f , .--.,. .fy ld v4 E ' fi --f- ' - 'X ' -' 5, Jw ',.'-fw , , ' -f V- 3: 111-.-:. .f ' ffS.zg.g-1+ ., f,7-'I it -' ' :Laid --'N- - irc Again ici, ,...-gi A+!-rf, ff- 7...,, gQ.'g-Qf'fr?1.--dfajxii. - . A'1 f-:-2Tf'?' ' gf.f 1f f'-fffxfl - 55 ' ' 1.14, V .-JE, 5.1! .1 .qs . f-,ff-W: ff - ' , Qi- -si' fl U ji -, ve, ,l f 1' I: V' . .I 'X .P f f .., . .1 ' . f- ' ,wb - 4 1. ' I 1, ,. 1 1 1 4, . 4 6 . . Y' ll 'v- 7 1 xfyr' 'A b1 5'f'- '2 - U TN v A 'JI' Q, . - ,., ? 'x 1 J 531' , 5 x-, '-N114 ' 0' ,.23iN 1 J ifx XC-M w . f.. r ff Q. 4, ORIGINAL X SOUNDTRACK ALBUM aff ff k '. f .x K 'Q WCHC Crusader Band .,.,fwq,u- -I Glee Club QQ .ag ni unior Prom Committee Stamfingf Tony Pettolina, Mike Hart, Kevin Condrou. Seated: Ed Cooney, Tony Silva, Bruce Clark. 'F- Qmxvl 1-X 41-QL. 5 'Ya v 42 -4' X4 Ag.. 5-52 41.135 I v 'I N ,J l K 1 if-4' D 'x f' 3 6- 3 . lm ' 9 Y' xg sf? fs Q Standing: Paul Courchaine, Matt Coffey, Jim Delehaunty, Dick Tubbs, Harry Mulry, Joe Tepas. Kneeling: Hayes Kiernan, Kevin Kelley. Homecoming Committee '-viii. QE' Winter Weekend Committee Condron Blaine O'C 'K-fx ' Kiki , ,Q ?? 6 Ik A, . 1 , Aw' 'f A 1 V in 1 1 'MVN .ff rflr f' um? 1 ' 'T 2SV.'f'f'2 Q51 .. , Q U ' f Af . 'N aww' f ffl' 45:- if 3 I P' P o?F'f w- A Thru the meld myftic laezmmering of the wild rqpping bail The sky cracked ity poemf in naked wonder Pu bl 1.661 tiom Bob Dylan 1 Crusader 1 J 1 r! Phil Smith, Bruce Clark, Bill McCarthy. 52 'QS vig! iii ' 1 N Qs,ZHIlU'lf30 s rw N 43 Years Uf Service r' I ' , . . 5 1924-1966 Glrumrhr L S I j w 9 X f tj Q '0Dnno?' B-Elini!-ES Others Sick In Rooms 'f 66Great umbersw Uf Students Sho Twenty-six per cent of American college students in a recent survey said they read Playboy mag- azine regularly. College newspapers still maintain a stalwart lead, however. Seventy-six per cent reported regular newspaper reading. Sec stars, page tour. tSt:ifI photo by Brian Hcllerfl I I 1 P By Philip I. Smith Great numbers of Holy Cross students Sunday report- ed to the Loyola Hall infirm- ary with what appeared to be similar stomach illness symp- IOITIS. An additional large number of students complained of be- ingill, but stayed in their domi- itors rooms rather than report- ing to the infirmary The nu.mber of sick students could not be irnmediatels- do At Infirmar With I 4 tcrmmed l ln an hour late inndas, how-- evcr, 19 persons reported to tliei rnhmiary -- all mrnplaining ofl snrular symptoms. The ssrnptonrs reported were nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Early Aftemoon A somewhat larger than ordi- nary number of students begun reporting to the rnfrrnrars early Sunday afternoon saying they had upset stomachs beserall were admitted, D The numbers increased until. .it approxiniixtely 9 p.m., 16 per- sons were bedded down in the rnhmirirs ward. On an average Sunday there are some Eve or sis students in the ward Dr. joseph F. Murphy, school physniian, and extra nurses were called in to treat the cases. Bs late Sunday. all available beds in the rnflrniary were full, the nurses said. As students continued to report, most were treated and released. Government akes use For Shorter Semester Student I By Philip Howe Because nf changes in theaca- demic calendar this year. there are 75 class days listed for the second semester, l3 more than last year, the editorial pointed DUI, Longest In History Thrs amounts to the longest semester in the history of the College, the editorial said Kimball Worft hungeilvlfllledy Fall Food Serving Style lH1t BY -lmxv Mr. T. Qlnrk. Kimball din- ing hall steward, Friday dis- counted rumors tliatthenfamily style method of serving food will be discontinued next year. According ro rhe rumors, Kim- ball service was to be changed to a hcafetena style operation next year. Qnrrk turnrerl the rnmnrs rn- curruct. ahsnlntels rncorrcvt Plans now are to continue Ki.mball.sersice as in the past. Quirk said. Payment Methods In another area of dining hall business. it was disclosed that payment procedures for the meals will not be changed eith- er lt luis been suggested that methods he resisecl to let stu- dents pay for their meals on the basis of what thej, eat, instead of paying for a semesters food in a lnrnp sum. The payment-per-meal plan is impossible, according to Mr. j.F. O'Keefe, director of busi- ness and finance. Under such a plan, either the mst per meal would go up or the quality of the food wouldgu ilnwn, O'Keefe said. Co Broke We would go broke if we maintained the same nrcalquali- See Food. Page Four Worker Says ' This building must be jrmedf' a maintenance worker said tt ednesday as he watched I water spurt from a broken valve in the basement of XiLilledy llall The observation was made rluring a threehonr shutdown of I the Xlulledy water supply - the llatest of a series of difficulties 'which hare arisen since the building opened in September. The water went off at approxi- mately 9 a rn. as a result of a faulty ' valve in the buildings Water meter, Workers from the lt orcestcr department of public world si ere i I l Sec Water, Page Four. The discrepancy resulted when the first-semester schedule was doctored to make room for be- fore-Chnstmas exe min a t i ons. The semester-shortening issue arose in an Oct b Cnrsader ecli- tonal. The Student Cmerrnnent has prepared its case for shorterung the second semester by a week. the president of the Govemment I said Fridas. The case has been handed over l to the College administration for its consideration. Cerald T Mulligan Government President said. The case suggests that the semester be shortened by cutting a week off .rt the enrl of the year, Mulligan said 0 moking Allowed ln Earl Days Here 'There was no smoking ter.- cept on the slyl. , .but a few students were allowed to chew . . Rev. Raymond Swords, president of the College. said Saturday in a Mulledy Hall dedication speech. Fr, Swords in tus speech stres- sed the strictness of the school in its early years and oompard those times with the present. The student body's willing- sed in talks by Gerald T Mul- ligan, Student Covemment president, and Willi.imT. Earls, president of the senior class.I Early Years While descnbrng early times at the school. Fr Swords point- ed out that the S2-4.000 given the school for its tirst buildings might pay for the foundation under one of the ssrngs in Mul- ledy Hall. ness to accept the new respon- sibility of today was discus- see Dedication' Page Foul'- Thc school year began earlier to alloss for the change. This made the first semester shorter than in previous years, despite the earlier start. The second half of the year, then, was lengthened, presum- ably to make up for the lost first-half days. The lengthening, however. was tem1ed an unnecessarybur- den on student and teacher alike. Longer Vacation The Cnrsader editorial pro- posed that the semester be short- ened by starting on jan. 18 in- stead of jan. ll, thereby creating a longer Christmas vacation. Mulligan said the Student Government ongrnally agreed with this suggestion :md had in- tended to submit rt to the admin- istration as the official Govern- ment plan. lt was later decided, however, that it would be preferable to move second-semester finals a- head from May l5 to Nlay S, Xiulligan said. Faculty Approval Mulligan added that a recent poll show ed faculty members to he in favor of this plan by a margin of 82-l5. Mystery Cause in Doubt The medical officials declined to state the apparent cause of the sudden onslaught. They would say only that the symptoms were similar. It's hard as yet to deter- mine if there is any common cause, sand Rev. james F. Bar- ry, dean of men. Fr. Barry assisted the rnhnn- ary staH during the evening Sun- day and into Monday moming as students continued to report Apparently it's either some virus or something rn the food, Fr. Barry said. When asked further whether food might be the cause, Fr, Barry said, We can't mle that out yet. We will loclf into rt, he said Waiting Boom As the evening wore on, the number of students in the in- Ill tinnary starting, room tluctnated between approximately hse and 15. Some reported a second tnne after being treated and re- leased once It was impossible td deter- mine the number of students who were sick but didnt rc- pon. A count on one corridor slum- ed that eight out of 66 students were ill, Parents Sick lt was further reported that, in some cases, parents who had visited the campus dunng the Parents' Weekend experienced similar symptoms Resident assistants were call- ed upon to help as the situation continued into the rught. They kept the medical staff supplied with eoftee, mapped floors and aided students-- many of whom found walking difticnlt because of sore muscles. U.S. Jur Indicts Former Student A Boston federal grand jury has indicated the 20-year-old former Holy Cross student being sought oy police in connection with thed.isappearanceofSl0,l50 from a Worcester bank, The indictment, returned last week, charged Fredenck T Daft jr., of Worcester, with larceny inthe disappearance ofthecash. Daft has not been seen hy his family or the Worcester police since the money was discovered missing from the Park Ave Branch ol' the Worcester County National Bank. Left Holy Lross Daft was a student at Holy Crnss until March of last year when he left the school 'for personal reasons. He was a memberoflastyears freshman class. The indictment charged that Daft took the money on Satur- day, Sept. 16. He was employed as a teller tor the bank, out tailed to show for work on the following Mon- day, His cash drawer was checked hy a substitute teller and thc disappearance of the money was discovered. Worcester police issued a war- rant for his arrest and notified Federal Bureau of Investigation and other authorities. Pol rc e speculated. however, that Daft left the country. lt was known that he had applied for a passport, police said. Asst. U S Atty. Stan.islausSu- checlir presented D:1ft's case to thc grand jury last week aftcran FBI rrsvestigatiori orcester Renewal Speedup Possible With Federal Fund Cambfluge N0l Until 19 74- This mp, issued by the Worcester R e development Though,Accordlng ToPlan Aufhofifv- Shows the Sufi By Bruce E. Clark Ntorcesterl. Canihrnlge set- tion. just north of the Holy Cross campus. is not slated for urban renessal nntii 197-1 at the carlrest. according tn Robert S. Russell. director of planning at the Worcester Ht-fluseloprrserrtl Authonty, WRA The Canibrrdge section has l long tome under attack by Holy Cross stnrlents liucausc ol the opprcssrw: atrnnspln-re genera-1 tccl bs the serrn-rntlrrstrnrlraerll area l 1 i Sontlrbrrdge Street. a major artery to the crts tnts tlrrungli the nrrrldle of thc section The Mohawk Says It Will Fly Game Special II :Mn nil-'nil r., ,nn-nfl Ili-- sarnrrlat tiniisl-. Insstfnrt luirlnrll ,g.rnn- .rnfl .sr-- s-.illnig rv, .nw .rr .r nun- -.slit-i. r.-tla-fr .mf ,f-.,,1-- snll at-.-,. si-.l...sst Krrlinr-s sas, rr -an g.-r -.nn llwrr lln: irrlrrn-s saul fmt i' if lm-. 4 in-rlnlr-fl .i pr-1 ral llrglrl rf. hnhsl-, I-,r rl.. ,Laria- 'n... I.la..- s.-.il '-,snr Crstrr .rr T 50 rn. lr,!..i-.-t s.rrrl Hn- r-11.11. Hip svn-I vi., Q rr... -.ill I.-asf ii-ina.. ..r . ,lf K. H. '-lhrv iritwrrnarrrrn .nt In hart from Nluliansl twins'-s tt-sr -' rwr l street was described recently by a local executive as so unappcal- ing that rt kept employees from musing to Worcester 'iTln- Crnrhrrclge settrnri is a loss priority area H Hussell said Prronty is detemnned by urgency and the ability to handle thesit- tldlultl Central Vsorcester has taken priority because the planning t-nnnil feels that this area af- letts the condition ut' the entire tits Industrizrlized The WHA is taking into tnn- sitleration the possibility that the entire Carnhndge arca urll be rnrlnstnalraetl hs the time tire tits turns Tu renessal ru that sttfllrli Varnnis segments of nts plan- ning agencies feel that the pre- sent st-rrit-rcstrlriitral, sernr-xn- rlnstnal tonflitron tannot ton- trrnre lor anutlicr rlv,-tails In the incantnm. thi- Carn- hrxflg--se-tron is slalerl int lions- nrg onli' wisp.,-.ri-,ir ln the its-alrh YJ,-prrrrm-.rr X'n.l.aif.ns ul the Iwnsrng tffles ssill he tor- i- .mx 'still-,nr It-it-nn' t- r-, pris- amy ..-H.-.sn ,,l...., Cant Barge klu-ad XM- ran! just gr, h.rr,gin,1 ini-. .r s--trrnn lit-.inte rr s .i ,..r.m..... ..f.-.. r+.....n ...ia 'ltr'-rr are lTUfl lannlr-:s rn 'lin .rr1'.r.rnr'l-.wt lin- I-.1-fn ill- r 'ln nt ln sairl Inn l.,-,-,nvinn--fl alien'-r nnil swlrra ul I--rms sl.-rnlfl rt- 'lvrw vlnrr rnirriliwi 1unsx:ler.rhI', li' Yln lrlin' -4' rr'l:.rfl- Mirr- rr---.s rl.. rr i eral plan for urban renew al in Worcester. The primary areas, al- ready designated for renew- Ial, are the Elm Park, East lCentral and Downtown lCentral sections. Landtak- !ing has already begun in , these areas. The other shad- led areas are marked for re- inewal in the next 20 years. l Cambridge, just to the 'north of the College, is a- lmong the low priority areas. l l The other area colleges, Qincluding Clark University itll, Worcester State l2l, As- lsumption 133, Worcesterjun- iior Hl. Becker junior I5l, lworccster Tech 163 and jQuinsigamond Community lCollege l7l are generally af- xfected. Worcester junior is in 'Picdmont. the nest high- ,priority sect ion. The col- leges have not been official- gly asked to aid in the rc- qnewal program. It secrns likely that the entire Cambridge area, which separates Holy Cross from Worcester, will he in- dustrialized in the next two decades. Cost 0fEf ort Depends On Demonstration Cities Bill Should the 90th Congress de- cide to pass the full Demonstra- tion Cities Bill next year. Wor- cester would only have to pay roughly 535.000 out of every Sl. million spent on local urban renewal. These hgures were outlined rn a recent circular sent from the Department of Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare KHEWI to city planners across the coun- try It is possible, of course, gressional opposition next year, as the preliminary legislation did in this years session. Lnder the current proposals. HEW will select 50 cities to participate in the hrst program Additional sets of 50 cities ssill be added as future programs are authorized and money appro- pnated Now Two-Thirds L'nrler the present systc ..., the federal government pass tssrr thrrds nf the total bill lor nr- ban renewal lf the Demon- stration Cities Bill is passed as it ssill prohabls be proposed, the it-:lr-ral gosernrnunt will al- sn pas' four-fitths ol the remain- ing llnrrl ul' the tab This leases a tits' ssrtlrrcslxns- WORCESTER fy- Q, RENEWAL PROGRAM . vid? Z - ff - fl -- 1, . X fs TAS' 1 if ,ff .s- rl diem .ssY'?'Xj ' ts A l at tl 'V' if 'ss .li r s f ., sv. ..- -1 , - 'I 1 3t 'lr ,.5:2.- f . v a. .f. . , st ,, 1 rc ,!'f-- f- 1 . J s pe A --l W L f -Q T l 19X ' E IIIE N g l'-F3 t 1 X t Ysllfff-I , up 'L -Z' K if-:,:5'Q7,7 j 'Til STI ir'-'Q ', . 2 Jill' ilwlllt 1iEf.+-5.-.sz- st' r . X , '- 12-E 4gyszrrr-rear,-me 2. ls? . 1 :.,7 'Es. -'4-,E 'h -,V ., as-' i. ' ' ,sv . . X Q at 's4 's-sxriag. er-neil ho 1 tl 1 x 'y' 2:42-file l?5li'llllll- lk? .X- X .r:r'2p! 'f 'JQEHELK f ag r -s ll .Wad-x gk .1 'ww 4 Q, Z at - is vs' -' as s ls . .. g ltrir 573-f.ml'2' f kzf. -Q f L, 's s f-f aff! I ' '1.i'-iw l Y A .Y ' ' ' lilfiiill FMEA if g :':.::'1'i. '1.':2 -, '- f l V , ... ..... WOICISUII IIDIVILOHAINY AUVMOIIYV srhrlits fur only 6-il pens-nl in rln- rural hill il..st.-sei, in Nlassam hnsctts, lliestale ssill pas hall ol' the niones that tln- tits must las nut nnrler the nrh.rn rr-nr-wal .nrangenn-nt, tnltrng the figure to roughly 3.5 per cent. The process begins when the funds for study and formulation of plans. This money rsinclnderl in the final figure allocaterlfrom federal sources, The small proportion of the total bill which the cities must pas may be experided in lucal improvements As a result, lotal appropria- tions fur schools and sewers, tor instance. are considered part of the citys contribution. Cambridge Not Affected Robert 5 Hnssell clrrettnr ol planning at the W'orr.ester Rc- deselopmt-nt Authonts, staterl recently that if Worcester is sc- l let-ted .is a dernonstratron tits, it rs unlike-ls' that the Canrhrnlge i area just nnrtli of Holy Cross will be among the areas rm- l l rnerlratels .rlfectcil , He singled ont tln- Pnslninnt section. south nl the three re- ncwal areas tnrrcntls connnrt- , ted, as tln- most liltcly target for rrnnrenliatv .ri lion He .rrgtit-fl that Pri-sllnwist ss.is a prune aussi ln-ianse rt ss.istr-n- trails lnt.rtt-tl 'l'lit- .rttiuns ssr' lake lwrv, ' ln' sanl. ' tan ars'r-l- eratu tnrr-s rlseulwrv l the rrlspfirlrrinc svitlu'Drrlmri- srvarinn fini.-s bill rf, Xt-into ,,.,, ,,,t.,,,,.,,,: .-it-nrnal s--letn--is . 'UI lin. pr..gr.un is 4-rnplrasrful rlss tlu' Ia-I II..rl tlu- lull ssill mul' Ili! sllt .rlnvltl3lclU,lllXllri1 it-st-rs nnllinn rl sperm-ls on nr- w han ruin-ss.rl She whose mind is a quiet quiet lake whose eyes sound deep whose shadows shimmer those eyes every sky stars you whose precious smile dawns To a Cla Priestess Groping On failing legs the clay priestess leaves, a feigned cripple, a cultic child, and a lithe, insensible elder. This woman is the one who blindly gropes -along making tin calliope music with the scrape of hips on the comparative sand cloth of her dress. sounds of the interim strains, the dying martial music of a new and violent taste, the sound of her white robe swishing the carnage from an innocent pagan altar. Behind her, a herd of mute but gutteral murmuring beasts, walking unscarred, unwashed, and untaken by her sacrincial wiles. each day This is her mobile if 61-eflies of balance, skin filagree, pass you and crepe, Cblinking set in motion by the winds their torches of minute theatrical lines , played to deaf ears In rows, by her former subjects. whose breathing Now, by an unfelt praise of smiles under she summons those who wait docile stirs all. -Manuel Line Upon Reading Teilharcl And what if time stood still like dew upon the grass Crystalline beads caught prisming the sun like some long forgotten rainbow. But no, it is but man's madness endowing time with his eternity. Time do not forget man but flow on sweeping him ever onward beyond his omega. for the priestess to return. Those who will find that she walks Homeric blind, and only whimsically gropes. ,fi 'ef' f n if is , I 1- 1. . fe 5 - 4 , s Q. 1 sk F x it na mm: Xa F 0 urple Bob White Gene Sisco john Berry 55 Nei' Frank McGuire, Bob Bradbury, Bill Blum Ralph Packard. Stamiing: john Robbert, Ed Finnegan, Mike Hart. Seated: Lester York, Dan Harrigan, Gene Sisco, Brian Heller. W 1,7 4 Q we Photograph of the Year Lwmg I C O- TH . w I.. ii? f ' TN x 4 9 ,Af ,Q-.. Q-599' +04-HI 4.021 - ' .A-A , , J' WF '3SLl5Sf6f-.IM 7- . 1 6-Q'-.Y A -4 SILNBHLR A, e A H 1 oo . Q , . f - .N-.Q Tlaefe were honored in their genemtzon, and were the glory of the tz'meJ: Ecclesiasticus overn ment and onom Student Government Elfjii 5 2 5 g' f f - T T , A -. -vw, K 3551 44 in T e Lf' , .132 3 Bruce Teague, Tim McDonald, Ted DeSaul- nier, Gerry Mulligan, Bob Kumor, Ralph Packard, Kevin Conclron, Bob Bass. -lc. .IA- QS' Senior Class Presidents .Jar E. 'S i 'E za' George Horton, William Earls, Torn Fitzpatrick, John McLaughlin Delta Epsilon Sigma Standing: William McEachern, J. Carl Gartner, George Horton, Bob Naylor, Bruce Clark, James Porcaro, William McCarthy, Joseph Dier, James Mcjnerney, Greg Morissey, john McA1lsten. Seated: Michael Lambert, Dave Moriarty, Anthony Proto, Michael Monjoy. 62 l Alpha Sigma u Standing: Bruce Clark, Dave Moriarty, John Mc- Allister. Seated: Carl Gartner, William McEachern George Horton. Sr:':J'i1:g.' John Dobbins, Dave Mozierirf. John Emires. Sezrfal: Vince Molloy. Bill Tosches. ta Sigma hi 5 57, 'Q Y 'a '13 . w f 'f' W1 .fi Psi Chi ? jim Mulhern, George Spell- mam. Bill McDermott, Blaine O'Connell, Iwiike Byrne. Q St. Thomas More Society 'YT ?' T T 'Y Terry Morris, Gerry Butler, Thomas Hogan, George Witek. Alpha Epsilon Delta Standing: Robert Naylor, Timothy Jette. Seated: Peter Lucas, john Dowling, Richard Johnsen, Terence Lee. S vm N M' '25-1a fF:xf , 4- 'e - C ,, t ' .- Y ,F , -, , ,REV ' Football Lv a game of violence 1 Spartan game It reauiref faerjzee dedication fma' .reMelenzal Vince Lombardi all S 112 oats l ,Qt 't 'sig 2,- -Q I f ,ga .. xi. '41 . O H. C. 0 Arm 14 The 1966 Holy Cross Varsity Football Team opened its season with a trip to West Point, New York, to play the Black Knights of the Hudson in Michie Stadium. The Crusaders lost 14-0, but their style of play foreshadovved their successes in the later season. The Cadets were led by quarterback Steve Lindell, fullback Mark Hamilton, and halfback Chuck Jarvis. Hamilton and Jarvis scored the two touchdowns, with able assistance from field general Lindell. The game marked the return of jack Lentz to the Holy Cross line-up after sitting out his entire junior year with a knee injury. The Lentz to Pete Kiminer passing combination provided the offensive highlight for the Purple forces. On defense, three juniors, Dick Giardi, Glen Grieco, and Dick Krzyzek, were the stand-outs, as they disrupted the Army offense all afternoon. The final decision reflected the offensive edge held by the Black Knights, as both teams presented ex- cellent defensive efforts. The final statistics reHected this, as the Cadets gained l4l yards on the ground and 134 in the air to the meager 44 and 95 yards for the Purple offensive. At no time were the Cru- saders able to move the ball deep in Army territory. The big bright spot was the defense, and prog- nosticators marked them as the key to Crusader for- tunes in the coming season. Homecoming 1966 saw the Crusaders bring the potential shown in the Army game back to Fitton Field, where they beat Dartmouth-1965 Lambert Trophy winners-and halted the Big Green winning streak at eleven. Jack Lentz and Glen Grieco were named the outstanding offensive and defensive players in the upset win. Lentz also won the john Turko Memorial Award, given annually to the outstanding performer in the Homecoming contest. It rained all day, but the weather did not seem to bother the Crusaders-both on the field and in the stands-as everyone did their part for victory. Holy Cross scored in the second period, when jack Lentz capped a 30 yard scoring drive set up by Dick Krzyzek's recovery of a Pete Walton fumble. Mike Kaminski added the point, and H. C. had a 7-O lead at halftime. The lead stood until the fourth quarter, when Dartmouth gained possession on the Purple 30, and quarterback Mickey Beard brought the Indians in for the score. Coach Bob Blackman decided to go for win with a two point conversion, but Beard's pass to Bob McLeod was broken up by cornerback Bob Kurcz. The defense had a tremendous afternoon. Grieco and Krzyzek spent the afternoon in the Green back- field, throttling Beard and speedster Gene Ryzewicz. The victory was well deserved, and was a tribute to the work of the entire team. H. C. Dartmouth 6 ind-K, -YASU -1 Q x . A111 H. C. 1-4 Colgate 14 The Crusaders brought their record to 1-1-1 as they fought the Colgate Red Raiders to a 14-14 tie at newly dedicated Andy Ker Stadium in Hamilton, New York. After a frustrating first 30 minutes of football, the Crusaders, under the leadership of jack Lentz, fought back with a devastating attack to gain the indifferent tie. The many aspects of kicking, or rather the failure of Colgate booters, gave the Crusaders their oppor- tunity. The first Purple marker was scored by Paul Scopetski as he raced 20 yards with a blocked kick. Colgate scored two touchdowns, but on neither occa- sion could they add the PAT which would have spelled victory. The Red Raiders completely outplayed the Cru- saders in the first half. But even so, they could only manage an 8-7 lead, on a touchdown and a safety, at the midway point. Holy Cross rushed back with a big second half rally on the deadly tosses of Jack Lentz. He hit on 11 of 17 passes in the half for 173 yards and one touchdown. Colgate's quarterback-the elusive Ron Burton-kept the Crusader defense alert all after- noon. Burton, a lightweight, avoided the heavy traf- fic with his quick moves and fakes. In the final analysis, the Crusaders played a tough team to a standstill, and left Hamilton looking for- ward to their next contest, against Boston University the following Saturday. H.C. 1 . .14 The vaunted Holy Cross defense rose to the occasion as they shut off a last second Boston University drive on the one-foot line to preserve a 17-14 lead at Nickerson Field in Boston. Both Crusader touchdowns were set up by inter- ceptions. ln the second period Dick Giardi grabbed a Terrier aerial at the B.U. 24, and five plays later Jack Lentz hit Tony D'Agata for the score. In the middle of the fourth quarter, safety Tom Kelly intercepted on the home 47, and raced it back 40 yards to the 7. Ralph Lilore carried it over for the score. Besides converting both PAT's, Mike Kraminski found the range from 29 yards out in the third quarter to provide the three point margin of victory. After a patented Purple first half, B.U. led 14-7. Terrier Reggie Rucker electrified the homecoming crowd with a 71 yard punt return in the first period. The other B.U. score came on a 35 yard pass play from quarterback Tom Thornton to end Capt. Bob Nichols. It was a serious contest all the way. In the closing moments the Terriers had a first and goal from the Crusader 6 yard line. On fourth down the clock ran out with the ball on the one foot line. Boston University had given the Purple a scare, and the team could thank a great last-ditch defensive effort for the 2-1-1 record they carried into the Syra- cuse game at Fitton Field. The Crusaders did indeed play Syracuse, and though they lost 28-6, they battled the machine-like Orange horde every step of the way. The play was even through the first half, as the score stood O-O at halftime. And in the third period the Cross was again on the move, only to have a freak pass interception give Syracuse a 7-O lead, and an unsurmountable psychological advantage. The final score was hardly indicative of the final contest. The Orangemen added 21 more points in the fourth period, as the Crusaders were forced to pass, pass, pass, in a desperate attempt to come back. The statistics, unlike the score, were almost even, reflecting the true battle. Jack Lentz scored the only Holy Cross touchdown on a beautiful five yard run, as he carried three Orangemen over with him. However, the Crusader defense suffered two severe blows. Glen Grieco-All-East middle guard during four previous weeks, injured his ankle and missed the entire second half. Crusader Dick Giardi was ejected from the game early in the fourth quarter by the whistle-happy referees. The quality of the ofiiciating throughout the contest was dubious. Near the end of the first half, a Kaminski field goal at- tempt was twice declared good, and then disallowed. After a tough irst half of the season, the Cru- saders owned a credible 2-2-1 record, and Coach Mel Massucco hoped that fate would be kinder to the Purple in the future. H. C. 6 Syracuse 28 W '1:r P 'I sill. We ff liiw' The Purple gridders faced the second half of their schedule quite optimistically. Talk about five con- secutive wins to close out the season was wide- spread. Buffalo had other ideas. Led by powerful fullback Lee Jones, the Bulls literally tore the vaunted Crusader defenses apart for five touchdowns in a 35 to 3 romp. The Cru- saders got on the scoreboard Hrst on a Mike Kaminski field goal, but it was all Buffalo for the rest of the contest. Speedsters Mick Murtha, Rick Wells, and jim Barks- dale made effective use of the Bulls' option rollout play, and Jones gained most of his 167 yards crash- ing through the middle of the Crusader line. The Holy Cross offense suddenly stopped moving after the field goal had given them the short-lived lead. Once the Bulls gained the momentum, they never lost it. The lone offensive standout for the Crusaders was Ralph Lilore, who ran for 73 yards in ten carries. Both the injured Jack Lentz and Phil O'Neil had a hand in trying to move the seemingly listless Cru- saders, but the cold, windy, and generally miserable game conditions seemed to bother Holy Cross more than they did Buffalo. This was perhaps the turning point of the season for the Crusaders. With their worst game of the season behind them, they were now prepared to tackle the rest of the schedule with added determina- tion and confidence. H. C. 3 Buffalo 35 ri 1. 4, p s , ,? 'N H. C. 16 Recovering from the drubbing at Buffalo, the Cru- saders delighted a Parent's Weekend crowd as they edged past the University of Massachusetts Redrnen 16-14 at Fitton Field. The Purple dominated play for 55 minutes. But then, the dazed Crusaders had to hold for dear life as the Redmen scored 14 quick points in the last five minutes. While the Purple forces spent the afternoon in U.Mass. territory, they moved the ball into the end zone only once, on a 17 yard run by jack Lentz in the first period. Aside from that, the scoring all came from the talented toe of Mike Kaminski. The . Mass. 14 pre-med specialist booted field goals of 25, 22, and 25 yards, in addition to his conversion of the Lentz touchdown. Lentz displayed the form which he had exhibited as a sophomore, picking up 110 yards overland in his best effort of the season to date. The offense showed that they could move the ball, though the scoring punch lacked something. Ac- cording to the statistics, the score should have been much greater in favor of the Purple. The victory was re-assuring after the loss at Buf- falo. The team seemed to find itself in this one, as they evened their record at 3-3-1. A brilliant display of oEensive power by jack Lentz led the Crusaders to a 24-12 victory over the Scarlet Knights on rain-soaked Fitton Field. The Lentz effort was almost equalled by Rutger's end Jack Emmet, who caught 13 passes for 257 yards, smashing seven all-time Rutgers receiving records. The Crusaders offense looked its best of the season as they moved the ball for 413 total yards-296 on the ground and 117 in the air. Lentz had his best day of the season as he contributed 138 yards afoot, and the whole 117 aloft. But it was a team iffort. The offensive line, hitting with harsh authority, pushed the Scarlet offense all over the field. Tim Hawkes electrified the hardy crowd with a 47 yard scoring run in the Brst period. And Crusader Dick Giardi blocked both a field goal attempt and a PAT. But mostly it was the unsung heroes of the offen- sive lineg guards Bill Morris, Bob Abbate, and Tom Heilman, tackles Bob Mahoney and john Gorter, and center Dick Grise. The big holes were there all afternoon. Although the statistics were fairly even, due main- ly to Jack Emmet, the Purple dominated play. Much of the Rutger's yardage was gained when the issue was no longer in doubt. H. C. 24 Rutgers 12 H C. 16 U. Conn. 0 srl! Over 5,000 loyal Holy Cross rooters sacrificed the nationally televised Notre Dame-Michigan State game and braved the cold weather to watch their Crusaders defeat the University of Connecticut, 16-O. jack Lentz once again provided the vital spark in the Purple attack, picking up 125 yards on the ground and completing 5 of 11 passes for an addi- tional 45 yards through the air. The Crusaders found themselves looking ahead to their encounter with Boston College and consequently did not possess their usual sharpness. However the Huskies spent most of the afternoon trying to get out of their own backfield, thanks to the fine efforts of defensive standouts Glenn Grieco and Dick Krzyzek, and thus could never get a sus- tained drive going. The Holy Cross offense lost the ball three times through fumbles, and despite being sporadic at times did prove to be consistent enough to register two touchdowns and a field goal. Lentz got the Crusaders on the scoreboard in the first quarter with a 26-yard rollout scamper. A second quarter 51-yard drive was culminated with a one- yard plunge into the end zone by sophomore Dan O'Rourke, and the Crusaders led at the half by a 13-0 score. Kicking Specialist Mike Kaminski closed out the afternoon's scoring with his seventh field goal of the year from 22 yards out. The win, though from all appearances insignificant, was indeed important. It guaranteed the Crusaders their first winning season since 1963. It was easily the most exciting game of the long and fierce rivalry. Rallying on the accurate arm of jack Lentz, the Crusaders defeated the Boston College Eagles 32-26 at Chesnut, and thus closed out their record at 6-5-1. Early indications were that the Cross was going to match the 76-0 thrashing delivered by the Eagles in the by-gone days of World War II. Lentz ran for the first marker himself, and threw 28 yards to sure- fingered Tom Haley for six more. Meanwhile Mike Karninski and his fabulous foot converted both times, and added two field goals from 44 yards each. The score at the end of the first period was 19-0 Holy Cross. But then, ecstasy turned to dismay, as the Purple fell apart before an Eagle rally which made the score 20-19 at the half. After intermission the two teams traded touch- downs, but B.C. still held the lead 26-25. The Eagles H. C. 32 B. C. 26 had the ball and the momentum as they started an- other drive. But the threat was turned back by Tom Kelly, as the baseball All-American intercepted to return the ball to the Purple offense. Jack Lentz started a methodical march down field, working sideline patterns to save time. And then, with only a minute left, on a broken pattern, Pete Kimener broke into the clear on the left sideline. The pass was perfect, and with Kaminskfs boot the score was 32-26. jack Lentz became the first two time winner of the coveted O'Melia Award for his ine play. And the victory typified the accomplishment of a 6-3-1 record against tough competition. Crusader football is finally showing signs of emerg- ing from the doldrums. With many fine returning lettermen, the only problem would seem to be re- placing the incomparable Jack Lentz. . AJ - 1 L . .Al The Holy Cross Soccer team played its second full season as a varsity sport this fall and met with mod- erate success. After getting off to a poor start, the team won live of its last six games to fmish the sea- son at 5-5-1. The Crusader booters came alive during the second half of the season, thanks mainly to the offensive punch of their two top scorers Bob Peck and jose Olbes, and the outstanding goaltending of Frank Godek. Led by Captain Roeland Brenninkmeyer, the team started the season with a heartbreaking 3-2 loss to Assumption. A disorganized 4-0 loss to M.I.T. fol- lowed, but the Crusader booters rebounded by play- ing a strong game against a rugged Nichols outfit. The Crusaders lost a tough 2-1 decision in this one absorbing the defeat in double overtime. 7 Soccer The next two encounters saw the booters tie Clark 2-2 and lose to Nasson College of Maine 6-2. Then came the revival. New Hampshire College of Ac- counting fell 5-1, thanks to the hat trick by jose Olbes. Three goals by Bob Peck paced Holy Cross to a 4-1 win over Lowell Tech. This was probably the team's best overall performance, as the booters played well both up front and on defense. A strong Worcester Tech squad handed the Cru- saders a 4-1 loss, but it was to be their final loss of the year, as wins over U.R.I., Stonehill, and the Uni- versity of Hartford closed out what the booters all considered a successful year. The great improvement over last season's 2-7 rec- ord gives rise to high hopes that Coach Don Lund- quist's outfit will continue its progress in the future. Cross Countr The varsity cross country team, despite dropping its first two meets and losing key runners during the New England Championships, finished the year with a respectable 5-4 record in a season filled with individual outstanding performances. Sophomore Jim Quinn and Senior Brian Kingston led the harriers throughout the season, with Quinn breaking the home course record against Albany State. The highlight of the season came against Boston College as the Eagles' Bill Norris came home hrst, but was followed by seven Crusaders in a meet which Holy Cross won easily, 20-43. The varsity harriers were hard hit with injuries in the New Englands as Quinn, Kingston, Rich Peters, and Tim Joyce were all forced to withdraw from the race because of injuries. The frosh team, led by the record-breaking run- ning of Art Dulong had only a mid-season loss to Providence mar what could be considered a perfect season. Dulong, Art Martin, and jim Walsh finished 1-2-3 in most of the meets, while receiving some strong support from Joe O'Rourke and Bill Gallagher. Despite a third-place finish by previously unbeaten Dulong, the frosh harriers tied Providence for first place in the New England Meet. The season reached its culmination point at the IC4A Meet at Van Cortland Park, N. Y., as Dulong broke the course record and the Crusader runners swept to the team title. The construction of a 340,000 Tartan all-weather track and the addition of these standout frosh har- riers make prospects for an outstanding varsity cross country team next season appear extremely bright. :DSI 4. V ,, M J ...P , P? - W . WV .,,g V -A-7 Y Y '.- 'rail' F' Y. A I 'S - K -,,,.-v ,..f 5 nv'- 1, ' Q ,f - .. -dl ,- ,Av , ,,--f-'- e N 47 ' - -1-7.4 , 's...,,,4- . g 'X Alf? '-'ga--f -X ' .v . ,Q ,Q ' ' K Z' ff , - , ,fx M, ' .W ,-'.e-f.',.m.ff:w4f-vpf ,IA 'fqs . 1 cv' I, X, v Tv fu . 4 1 , - -:NY I . , , X: ,f M, 5. ,., .ffm ' ,J 156,13 -'mf fn .ff xg. . ,,,1-..,f ,l V? . , A4 , I, ,,,,y.,+,, if In bmleetbvzll af in all elfe . . . az .roplaomore mmm cz mlre fool jack Donahue V511 ter Sporty 3-1 fs Q- NIT, NIT -shouts were heard from the more than 2,000 Holy Cross fans-students and alumni- packed into Fordham University's fieldhouse as the Crusaders were thrashing a hot Ram five. Fordham coach and NIT selection committee chairman John Bach had to wait only three more days before he could get his wish and keep the Cross out of his suddenly nationally-oriented tourney. For Satur- day, February 25, at the Worcester Auditorium be- longed to one man-jimmy Walker-who was even more responsible than Bach for keeping Holy Cross out of New York's spotlight. This 1966-67 basketball season was, as predicted by coach jack Donahue, a typical one for a team dominated by sophomores. It started back in early December at that cold gym in Hanover where Holy Cross bested a weak Dartmouth squad 72-55. The man with the golden arm, Ed Siudut, opened his varsity career with 18 points, as did Al Stazinski, who brought new strength into his junior year. The bull of the backboards, Keith Hochstein, started where he left off last season and smothered 17 big rebounds. Then disaster struck with four straight losses- St. john's 77-60, Yale 90-73, Army 65-44, and West- .--4' mu, . ern Kentucky 90-84-but the last of these turned the tide of the season as the Cross became tougher in each successive outing, winning fourteen of their next seventeen contests. St. johns was just too much, too soon. All-Ameri- can Lloyd Dove gave Ron Texeira some offensive lessons with 24 points and was aided by the next in a long line of stars, soph John Warren. Warren was the first to show the only way of defensing Ed Suidut -don't let him get the ball-and outscored him 14 to 9. This contest catapulted the Redmen from New York to a season which found them and B.C. at the top of the heap in the East, with both grabbing NCAA tourney bids. Then followed the two worst performances of the year by the Crusaders-at Yale and at Army. The Eli outhustled and outrebounded the much taller Crusaders 38-29, with only Ed Suidut and Keith Hochstein shining on offense, scoring 25 and 20 respectively. Dick Stoner, 11 of 15 from the floor, Ed Goldstein, 8 of 15, and Neil Piller, 6 of 9, were too hot for the sluggish five from Mt. St. james. The drought continued at West Point where I-I.C. ran into some guerilla warfare first hand in the persons of Bill Schutsky and Steve Hunt who com- binded for 55 points and almost all of Army's re- bounds. Al Stazinski played only a short time due to illness, and Keith Hochstein broke a bone in his foot, which put him out of action for the next ten games. Keith played on the foot a good part of the second half and wound up with 16 points and 10 rebounds. The glorious trip to Miami and the Hurricane Classic lay ahead with Western Kentucky, the first round opponent, in the top five in the pre-season ratings, and Holy Cross without Mr. Hochstein. Coach Donohue said before the tourney that It means that Tex must do the job now. That much is certain. Ron Texeira now had some room in the pivot to move and gain the confidence he had noticeably lacked on Offense in the first four games. But the big names in H.C.'s fine game against Western Ken- tucky were Suidut and Stazinski. Easy Ed scored on l4 of 27 from the floor and 9 of ll from the free throw stripe, as Hilltopper Coach john Oldham com- EH' 4 .Q .ff R, mented, Suidut is one of the greatest shooters I have seen anywhere . . . They were the toughest we've played this season. Staz held their All-American Clem Haskins to six field goals before fouling out with 7:20 to go. Referee Charlie Foutz of Western Kentucky's Ohio Valley Conference helped give Western Kentucky 35 foul shots to H.C.'s 23 and chipped in with two technicals on Coach Donohue. The consolation game found the Cross banging home l6 free throws, 10 by Chuck Mullane, in a five minute overtime period to defeat Pennsylvania 89-84. Tex led four double-figure Crusaders with Zl while pulling in ten rebounds. An identical five-point overtime victory followed at the University of Connecticut, as the Cross tri- umphed 74-69. This was a big step forward. The perennial Yankee Conference champs were unbeaten Csix in a rowb at home and were heavy favorites over the 2-4 Crusaders, but Suidut, Stazinski, and Texeira out offensed and defensed the Huskies. Easy Ed Qi - ....,,, banged home 11 field goals from his usual range, omnipresent Al hit for 17 points and had 20 re- bounds, while big Tex showed his natural defensive reactions in blocking shots and tickled the twines for 17. The Worcester Auditorium saw the Crusaders drop their second in a row at home before a packed, but student-less crowd to Fairfield 72-68. This one hurt. Excuses: no Keith, no cheering, no Tex for the last seven minutes of the game Cvia foulsj. 13 baskets by Mr. Suidut in the second half, 36 points for the night, was the only oHense the Cross could muster, as six double-figure Stag scorers made the difference. Then a five game win streak brought the season's skein to 8-5, as H.C. beat U.R.I. 74-66, Navy 58- 56, Springfield 70-64, Dartmouth 75-64, and Colgate 75-54. The Yankee Conference runner-up fell to the Cross as the men from the hill regained their touch on the road. Gerry Foley came in for Suidut in the second half and played so well at both ends of the court that Ed never got back in. This spark plus Al Stanzinski's 23 marks were too much for the Ram five. The Crusaders then journed to Annapolis to meet a small but tough Navy squad. Jim Murray, now developed into the take-charge playmaker sought all along by Coach Donahue, and Chuck Mullane with- stood Navy's pressure defense, Tex played like Bill Russell in blocking countless shots, and yes-Ed Suidut creased the cords for 20 more big ones. Three easy wins followed, two at home against Springfield and Dartmouth, and the third at Colgate. Suidut kept up his average with 22, 25, and 20, as Ron Texeira continued to improve at both ends of the court. Sophs Chuck Mullane and jimmy Moore gained valuable experience sharing backcourt duties -7- 113- J,l 4- Ui I III. l11 '1'. '1- , i . .v ug.. -' I Q. .k Q41-E , ' 1 I - HQQI- ' r v ' YQ- x ,Qin Q . Q - I ' V . A 4 1 3 5' J , 3 , i ' f' ':. - 'xr 2 5 , ff ' I ' L' I ' U' X ' - ' . , .- g -,L 1 -- :A 8 ' P-ve. Q , 1 , r .- , ,- .-..,p-, . . - . ,.g - 1 .. --H31 - + , :L rf . V : f4'4?-f - f- 5,-if ' ' U 5: A ' X 513-Q iiffli: 1' ' 5 . i ' D--2 'V Af QQ K 3. ' ' 2 f 1 . 3, 7' T t ' 531 ' ' ., .. '- LA 'A' -' 7 ' ,aQ'l3:s3f?,gf2+f 3 K. ff 3 , ' 1. gf' . . '-Y ' ?? xi X V 3 is 'Y 'Q 'K f Q 'E ai 1 . CE F'-:lf fi- V J ' .WL 41' 5 1, , 'Q-Al. A A V A, 25, ' .6 . 2 Q. ig I 3 - f , , s ,hr gv r , . 5 3 ,Q -35 1 A I 5 in ' ,Q V is , gf,-'X fl 41 aa' i 1 , ff- 4. f. ' .-,, . ,.. - V ,i ,,,-... . . , gist., 1 ' f, ' - -:.f4Er,- - sign. ,f .f. ' ' r ,fue '. , wx i 3 1 .f 4-1 4?-Cv: N .T 5 ,435 QNU snuck with jimmy Murray, while Al Stazinski adjusted well to the front court. The team was improving. The night after the Colgate game, the Cross went a little further north to Manley Fieldhouse on the Syracuse University campus. No one could have known how frustrating the next few hours would be. As the saying goes, The final score C91-81D was no indication of how the game was played. junior Vaughan Harper had taken over the reins from Coach Freddie Lewis, intimidated the referees, and screamed at Cross players shooting foul shots until Coach bonahue went after him, but was restrained Conly Cross men were restrained? by the men in stripes. George Hicker, a blond bomber, and Richie Cornwall helped Harper put the Crusaders out of the game early in the second half with long range popping and a full court press. Mr. Stazinski single-handedly brought H.C. close at the end, winding up with a career high of 828. Back to Worcester-and as the Crmader put it, The Return of the Nativen-Keith returned ahead of schedule, and the rugged rebounder turned into a shooter C7 for 85 while the Cross stomped Boston University 115-60. jovial Jack Donahue did anything TQ but try to roll it up, as evidenced by all eleven players hitting that scoring column with joe Christofi' con- tributing ten points from off the bench. A distrastous trip to Newton preceded a six game win streak. The Eagles' sophs, Terry Driscoll and Billy Evans, gave them the two key weapons of the fast break-the pitch-out and the middle man-to lead B.C. to their 92-74 triumph. HC. Senior Cap- tain Ralph Xvillard brought the Crusaders back after they fell behind Cfrom down 42-40 to 57-425 when Ron Texeira sat down because of four fouls. The Cross never came all the way back. Ed Suidut came home to W'orcester Auditorium and shot U. Mass out of sight with 37 points, as the Cross eased to a 78-65 triumph. Keith Hochstein. still limping, chipped in with 15, and jim Murray played his usual great defensive game. Two more home wins followed: 88-69 over St. SX . Anselm's and 92-85 against NYU. The front three were the difference in both contests. Hochstein C26J, Suidut 1247, and Texeira C195 sent St. Anselm's back to Manchester sorry that they had made the trip. It was sweet revenge for last year's drubbing at the hands of these same Hawks. The NYU game was the best many Crusader fans had seen since jack the Shot departed from the hill. The unstoppable Ed Suidut put home 23 in the nrst half as H.C. held a 48-27 half-time stranglehold. Ed's assortment was from anywhere inside half-court at every possible angle-and some impossible. The auditorium banter at halftime consisted of three letters: NIT. Hopes were high. The second half did nothing to diminish these hopes, even though Mel Graham did something to bring the game to its final 7 point difference. Malcolm threw in every- thing. 46 points in all but 14 in the last five minutes Z when H.C.'s bench had been cleared. The win streak continued on the road against U. Mass 464-549 and Assumption C64-625. The Cross was ahead all the way in both contests. Murray and Stazinski beat the Redmen's press, and Tex shut off their high scorer, Billy Tindall, in the victory at Amherst. Suidut's 21 and Keith's 17 led the H.C. scores. At the Greyhounds pit, hundreds of Assumption rooters and their team's press rattled the Cross until steady Al Stazinski hit four free throws in the last minute to ice the contest. Balanced scoring prevailed in this one as both Tex and Keith hit for 16, and Ed popped in 15. Now back to where we started: Fordham Univers- ity duting Reading Week. Fordham scouting reports said H.C.'s backcourt CStazinski and Murrayj couldn't shoot, so the Rams' strategy was to sag on the big men inside. These big men got the ball, fired it im- mediately to our bad-shooting backcourt duo who proceeded to swish a combined 14 for 18 from mid- dle distance range to lead the Cross to a 73-63 triumph. Keith added 12 foul shots Cout of 135 to tie Al for top point-getter with 16, while big Tex hit five points in a row down the stretch C15 in allb and intimidated Fordham shooters all night long. A 15-7 record looked good for the NIT. The inimitable Jimmy Walker had one of the finest nights of his career when his Friars put the lid on H.C.'s NIT hopes. The 2-3 zone of the Cross gave Jimmy time for his long set shots C15 for 21 from the iieldj and the refs gave him a few foul shots-21 to be exact-of which the Walk hit 17. Providence came out with a unique defense: four men played their usual combination Cman to man and zonej defense, while Walker stayed with Suidut wherever he went. The Cross never solved it, although .Sf I wx 4, .Fa v 5 J .- -A me .,., ?',wgc4?f?9fTvf': faux- :cr . . 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A' Vff' ' 1 ' .LQ 142.-1 f ' 51 ' '5 7' ff 'i,Q'5v'. fl-f5.:v5.i'f'N' ' 1 sf -' ',, v-fx.-Y Q ' 1' ,Q-w',,,, '-4, I, pw .,,,,w.:,'3:',4 433,-F kfzqf, W ag , A- , ' ww- san -1-4 'f ,V .- 'f ps2215:eiwafiir-'titlsfwiffilvf we ' i --- 1 --A .. .. me-11' , ---gif, Max, .:' .' b-bfi,-, 4 'ffl 'ffrmzvf fwfr -fag .-5-'21, -' if-wQf.,f :J I A L -'1',fT.f,: . f' .K ' A W, ,, '-:' .,2'3.--Y-i Pe- ' Afiw'f ' af f - -- f. - - Q, 2 'JS - ' ,1 4- 'ew-1 , ,- r 4 -:.f'4af,.. ,J j,:?f,f , .M J: . U t ,J S-,gvgf .2 1 Y 3 SWF,-get, ,qw Q , h , 4 , ,. X . f Q--L we M' 42.11-3 - ' '1 ,,,.- ve . . ' . , - K VL V V . y N I t 'Y eggs, fi II A V 1 I A Keith Hochstein muscled his way for 31 points in the second half and 36 in all. The Crusaders won the honorary Yankee Confer- ence championship by knocking ofl U. Conn again, this time by a 70-61 margin. Tex had the best game of his two years, as he threw in 18 points, but more importantly blocked nine shots. Wes Bialosuknia, a 29 a game scorer, went 4 for 29 from the field thanks to a tenacious defensive job by Al Stazinski and the ominous hands of Mr. Texeira. Balanced scoring once more put H.C. on top: Suidut 22, Tex 18, Staz 18. The finale: a screaming host of Cross students saw B.C. end its regular season with a 21-2 record. An H.C. 17 point lead with 3:13 left in the first half, an 11 point lead at half-time, but the score when it was over-B.C. 76, H.C. 71. Four fouls on Tex hurt, but B.C.'s depth hurt more. Steve Adehnan kept them close with 17 in a row near the end of the first half, as the front line of the Cross dominated the boards Cby 12 reboundsb and the score. Keith led the second half fight back and ended with 27 points. But, alas, the victory was not to be. It was the end- 16 and 9-no NIT, but shall we say the season was a beginning of a new era C the Donahue eraj in Holy Cross basketball. Swimming , s 1 ,,.,,,,,,,.N.w..M. xn 2-.grauaa-asa-va-iz.-.Q--ave:-1 -1 ---'M 1' 'HM - --Q-ml-f f - - -----H X . 'gf' Suffering badly from the loss of key members of the 1965-66 team through graduation, the Crusader Vars- ity Swimming Team splashed through its toughest competition ever to a 3-6 season. The mermen opened rather inconspicuously against the University of Connecticut, as the Huskies defeated the Crusaders 66-28. Holy Cross was outclassed by the powerful Connecticut swimmers as U. Conn swept most of the events except the diving. After their opening loss, the mermen splashed to two victories in a row. They handled Nichols 62- 33 before Christmas, and came back to beat WPI 55-38 at the end of vacation. H.C. wasn't as fortunate, however, in its next meet, as it lost to the University of Vermont 37-58 in its only home meet of the season. The Cross got back on the winning track for the last time by beating Bab- son lnstitute 57-37 before the roof fell in. The roof consisted in four losses to end the sea- son: 28-67 to Springfield, 43-52 to Tufts, 35-60 to UMass, and finally 32-63 to MIT. Senior divers Pat Murphy and Sam Shoen swept through the first seven meets, undefeated by oppon- ent performers, in supplying the key scoring punch in almost every meet. Hard-fought losses to New England finalists from UMass and M.I.T. only cer- tified the Crusader divers' claim to some of the top positions on the local scene. Sophomore freestyle ace Dennis johnson was a steady point-getter, peaking with a double win in the Babson meet. Versatile matators Tom Steffens Csophj and jim Boyle Cjr.D proved invaluable to a team traditionally plagued by lack of depth. Sophomore butterfly specialist Bill Redmond prob- ably epitomized the spirit of hard work, lowering his times as many as twenty seconds in the 200-yard event while approaching school record clockings. Despite the disappointing record, the predominant- ly sophomore and junior team showed much promise for a brighter future, and provided new coach Paul Parenteau with a plethora of individual surprises. Hockey The 1967 hockey campaign turned out to be the best in many years for Holy Cross. The team won its first Worcester College Hockey League title and posted an overall record of 14-7. When veterans Bucky Minkel and Bob Moran were lost before the season started due to injuries, hopes were dimmed for the icemen. But due to the rapid overall development of the team, it got off to a torrid start, winning seven out of its first eight games. This included a 4-3 decision over tough UConn. Sophomores Billy Butler, Gerry Riley, Frank Har- tig, and Jay Gibbons gave coach Bill Kane speed and scoring punch in the lines. Matt Byrne, Dick Antoniuc, Pete Mullen, and Richie Ring also turned in fine two-way performances. Anchoring the defense was Captain Paul Doyle. He teamed up with Jim Farley and Mike Quinn, who developed into a solid body-checker, to give the Crusaders an aggressive and stubborn combination. Another sophomore, Bob johnson, developed into a fine goalie and came up time and again with many sensational saves. About mid-season, injuries hit the team again. Richie Ring, Frank Hartig, and Pete Mullen were all forced to miss several games causing the team's per- formance to slip somewhat. However, Billy Butler, who led the team in scoring with 53 points, and Captain Paul Doyle, who chipped in over 20 points, led the team to the league title by defeating runner- up Nichols College 3-1 and 7-2, and a 6-4 decision over UMass in non-league play. The outlook is a bright one for Coach Bill Kane in the next few seasons. His young team turned in a fine season and Assistant Coach Bob Skinner has some talented freshmen ready to join the Varsity. Holy Cross Hockey has come a long way, but this should only be the beginning of its rapid develop- ment at Holy Cross. Y 1. 1 z X A -. XX W . - 5 X ' ff f -J E. Q lf . TWD Wrestling From pre-season forecasts, it looked as though the Crusader grapplers under Coach Hampton Perkins could look forward to at least a repetition of their winning 1965-66, first year record of 6-3, as spring interclass wrestling olympics 119665 generated tremendous enthusiasm for the new sport, while at the same time, fall intramurals C1967D succeeded in bringing wrestling to the attention of still more people on campus. As the 1966-67 season got under- way against UConn C5-355, B.C. C5-Slip, Lowell C14-219 and Central Conn. State C11-265 the week before final exams, the H.C. matmen found them- selves inexperienced, lacking depth, and forfeiting in the lightweights-a problem which prevailed during the course of all their contests, with the exception of their exciting, full teamu, single victory over Dean jr. College C24-13D. At 123 lbs., Gene Keogh C2-95, a first year grap- pler, showed real promise, especially in his match against Lowell State Q11-7D and W.P.I. At 137, Bill Orsini C5-5-17, returning for his second year, wrestled admirably for the Crusaders, winning his last four matches. Bob Ganswindt C4-6-15, at 152, wrestling above his weight class, served his team Q 4? V , ,La if at :fm 1 ,sq . 1 1 1 well, turning in an unusually good performance against Brandeis, pinning his 177 lb. opponent in 3 min. Rich Rodger C4-75, the most versatile and im- proved wrestler on the team, came through during his first year to win four out of his last six contests at 160 lbs. Senior co-captains Greg Smith C8-2-lj and Walt George K6-55 set the pace for the Crusader grunt and groaners this season. Greg, despite a severe ankle injury at the outset of the season, registered six pins, all within three minutes, to give him a heavyweight wrestling record at H.C. of 16-3-1, a most laudible accomplishment. Walt, wrestling at 167 lbs., got off to a slow start, dropping his first five out of six matches on point decisions, only to come on strong at the end to win five straight, three by fall, to post 12 wins in 20 matches while wrest- ling two seasons for H.C. With eight junior experienced grapplers returning next year, the prospects look bright for a winning season. This year's record of 1-10 was not at all indicative of the spirit of the team, as they wouldn't overcome their enormous lack of depth with any amount of work and desire. 1 1 QBAQ-,A . ,ag . A gil vi. 131, 'lx 1. Fencing in In its third year of varsity competition, the 1966-67 Fencing Team completed its season with four vic- tories and seven defeats, finishing third in the New England Intercollegiate Fencing Tournament at Trin- ity College in Hartford. Senior co-captains Tom Spacek and Dan Floryan, along with seniors Wayne Sassano, Bob Wfallyn, Tom Venus and Don johnson, led the team in compiling its best winning percen- tage in its history. In the course of the season these two co-captains broke two Holy Cross records. Dan Floryan won twelve consecutive bouts to break the former record of nine, and Tom Spacek won ten consecutive bouts in the New England Tournament to break the former record, also of nine. Besides these six lettermen, the team was also aided by the MVS -, '55, efforts of juniors John Duax, Tony Nelan, john Debbins, and Bill Martin, and by sophs Phil Morri- son and Paul Shafer. The team entered all of its meets this year without the benefit of coaching, relying on the experience of its senior members, especially its captains. This ex- perience paid off in victories over Southeastern Mas- sachusetts Technological Institute, Norwich Academy, Brandeis, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute, but the lack of coaching showed in the team's loses to Harvard, M.I.T., and Trinity. However, the prospect of a part-time coach for the near future should en- able the team to compete more successfully with these opponents in coming years. WF' AP' ,-vnu, ,4 F an ' t A aw but 1 X 5.3.5 f. .Qw- xmk 1 ,J y. f -5 .5 ' -M 1 WMF? , lg-A ., ,. if.. 1 A 'I- vq.. m 'fm K ai ati.. x 9 Q Q' 5'-W. ' fin R' MSW- N- Spring bezel corne Like the .silver needle-note of ez Fife Like dl white plume and ez green Lame and ez glittering lennfe And ez jubilant drum. Sprin g Sparts joseph Ausland C 4- -imyfif' I . na. W' Q. -'affm if Qu 6? ,, 'MQ ,M . W 'w ,affgyw ,, 4 uw af . 1 IV :JW S .1 I va ma 19 ff Q. 4 ,ff wa W, , ' I' ' 98 Track The 1966 outdoor season saw the Holy Cross varsity track team plagued once again by the two-fold jinx so familiar in the past: injuries and the lack of scoring power in the field events. As a result the Crusaders were the victims of several teams by nar- row margins, and they lost their New England Cham- pionship crown. On April 16th, the 'first annual Boston College Relays set the pattern of things to come. The Cross varsity dominated the running events, but when the field events totals came in, they found themselves in fourth place with 41 points, behind Manhattan 1655, Boston College 1615, and Northeastern 1615. The two-mile relay team of Terry Horgan 11:58.75, Brian Kingston 11:53.45, Kevin Callahan 11:54.65, and Bob Bartolini 11:55.65 Won their event in a time of 7:42.3, and the 440 and 880 relay team of John Collins, Paul Hartrey, Steve Harbeck, and Chris Shea also turned in winning efforts. The Holy Cross mile relay time of 3:16, set by Collins, Brian Flat- ley, Bartolini, and Shea, was the East's fastest up to that date. In the first dual meet of the season, the Crusaders lost a heart-breaking 78-76 decision to Dartmouth. Brian Flatley, first at the last hurdle, fell and had to settle for third. The Cross needed a 1-3 finish in the shot put to take the meet, and got the first on joe Lilly's throw. But Pete Kimener, throwing for the first time, fell short of third by a mere six inches. High points for the Purple were the sweep of the half-mile, Chris Shea's 100 110.35 and 220 123.05 victories, Kevin Callahan's mile 14:22.35 and two mile 19:50.55 winning efforts, and the work of Paul Hartrey who scored in six events, including a win in the broad jump and seconds in the triple jump and 100. The next week, the Crusaders traveled to Provi- dence where they were completely outclassed by the Brown Bruins. The only first places the varsity could garner were John Collins in the 440, Chris Shea in the 100, Dick Lague in the hammer, Brian Flatley in the 440 hurdles, and the mile relay team of Kings- ton, Flatley, Shea, and Bartolini. Against Springfield, in the first home meet of the year, the Cross dropped seven out of eight field events as the Maroons built up a 53-19 margin. This proved to be insurmountable, despite the work of Kevin Callahan, who won the mile 14:20.35 and two-mile 19:435, and Bob Bartolini, who won the Q' an 'O 'uw- 9 I we Q Qwmwfn W WM 0' W' W WWW Wk ww sf 440 in a stirring come-from-behind finish and aided in the sweep of the half-mile. The final tally showed Springfield 86, Holy Cross 63. The University of Massachusetts meet again saw the Cross drop a close decision, 76M to 72M, de- spite being outscored 46M-25M in the field events. The near comeback was paced by Chris Shea with wins in the 100 and 220 and Kevin Callahan, who took the mile and two-mile. Bartolini, Kingston, Flatley, and Charlie Ekdahl also turned in single vic- tories. The big difference for the Redmen was Stan Maderios who won the broad jump, high jump, and triple jump, and placed in the 440 hurdles and the high hurdles. Against Boston College in the final dual meet of the year, the Crusaders finally received ample sup- port from the field events, as they swept the high jump and the triple jump, and took a first in the pole vault. However th-e big Weightmen of B.C. scored 26 out of a possible 27 points, and Eagle dis- tanceman Bill Norris turned in an amazing perform- ance. Norris, who was presented with the jack Ryder Club Award as the outstanding performer of the meet, took an astounding triple victory in the mile C4:18.7D, the half-mile C1:55.3D and two-mile C9:42.3D events. Sophomore John Collins, returning from the injured list, smashed the school record in the 100 with a blazing 9.4 effort, and the mile relay team of Flatley, Kingston, Shea, and Bartolini set a track record of 3: 17.6. Chris Shea turned in another fine performance, taking the 220 in 21.3 and seconds in the 100 and broad jump. In the New England Championship meet, defend- ing Holy Cross found themselves spread too thin, and after a hard fight were forced to take third with 25 points, behind Boston College C335 and Central Connecticut 4265. 100 Sophomore john Collins was an individual stand- out, winning the 100 with a new record of 9.8 Cwip- ing out the old record held by Holy Cross' Andy Kellyj and the 220 with 21.6. Chris Shea turned in one of his finest efforts with a second in the 220, a third in the 100, a fourth in the broadjump, and a fine mile relay leg. Brian Flatley, who ran the fastest qualifying time in the 440 hurdles, had the misfor- ttme to fall in the finals. Co-captains Bob Bartolini and Kevin Callahan, seeking to come up with a winning combination, found they had taken on too great a task. Bartolini, who qualified in both the 440 and 880, could not recover sufficiently for the finals, and took a fourth in the 880. Callahan, al- though he qualified for the 880, found that his non- scoring mile effort had taken too much out of him, and he placed only fifth in the 880 Hnal. The mile relay provided a fitting Hnish to the frustating year as the Holy Cross team turned in the most moving performance of the meet. John Collins, leading off in his seventh run of the day, pulled a muscle after 150 yards, but in a display of pure determination fought to a 52.8 finish. Then Bob Bartolini, running 48.2 in his fifth race of the day, and Brian Kingston with 49.5 set the stage for Chris Shea, who took the baton twenty yards back and ran a fabulous 47.3 to finish one yard back in third place. The picture for the coming year is bright despite the graduation of Callahan, Bartolini, Shea, Flatley, Clarke, and Eagan. Returning are co-captains-elect Terry Horgan and Rich Peters, seniors jim Fallon and Dick Eagan, juniors Brian Kingston and Paul Hartrey, and an array of talent from year's fresh- man team, including jim Quinn, Mike Daley, Dan O,Connell, Tim Joyce, Bob Dewey, Tony D'Agata, joe jameison, Tom Scanlin, Bob Welch, and Pat Hayes. .- W' BT -x , Yu.- 'Nui Q vt Q1 .Q , Q.-' I Q QC .Q , .I - .A . ,.2' V .k4:II,I. . 'A S' , sr If. -.' I , I ,gh , M, ' -I Wx ,Q V .-' Q, ,P-I v - ' ' ,1 . ' ' MI 'Mfi' ,If ,Ig ', I 4-I '-'ma' 1v'.. ' '. Y-.lr 9.-' L , ' .vK'v,,.,. f S I QWQQ: 4 , , ' ' Q7, . It f, kfgmn , I QI A - 4 - ' . gg- pw ..I:Ii:gII -- -' ' A ,42.4+. f'1-E! A ' If h I ' I :L?J f' 'fkwv I 4 .. ' . . '. 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Although it is not officially recognized by the Ath- letic Association, the Holy Cross Rugby Football Club affords the opportunity for some seventy-five students to participate actively on the inter-collegiate level in a sport which demands stamina, agility, and strength. The Spring season of 1966 opened with a trip to the Monterey Invitational Rugby Championship in Monterey, California. On the basis of their Hne record and reputation in Eastern Rugby, the Crusaders were the only team from east of the Mississippi to receive a bid to the tournament. The tournament was played on March 19 and 20, but the Purple arrived in California a week earlier. In their first contact with a western team, the Cross ruggers fought Santa Clara University to a 6-6 tie, and then defeated Sacramento State 6-3 two days be- fore the tournament began. In the opening round of the tournament, the Cru- saders drew top-seeded Stanford, and fell to this ex- cellent team by a score of 13-5. In the second game, a highly disputed one with UCLA, Holy Cross out- scored the Bruins ll-9. The Navy Phib-Pac team defeated the Crusaders in their final appearance in California. Though they did not finish high in the tournament standings, the ruggers returned home quite satisfied with their showing and the impres- gig' '11 sion of Holy Cross which they had left on the coast. Several weeks after the trip, the officers of the club were contacted by the University of Kansas team, then on an eastern tour and eager to play Holy Cross. The Crusaders played their visitors right off the field, taking the A-game 18-O and the B-game ll-O. Besides these highlights of the spring season, the Crusaders played a full schedule with eastern powers such as Brown, Harvard Business, Boston Rugby Club, Cornell, and Wfilliams. This fall the team faced the ominous problem of rebuilding. Through graduation they had lost many of the men who had been mainstays of the team for three years, including their two Hne coaches. Only two experienced seniors were returning, and the bur- den lay heavily on the juniors and sophomores. The Crusaders had speed and determination but lacked the size and experience so necessary for a winning team. The ruggers started the season with a bang, rolling over Fordham by scores of 8-O and 27-O. The Crus- aders then dropped two games to Dartmouth over Homecoming Weekend before embarking on a short southern trip which highlighted the fall campaign. After losing two close games to Princeton, they de- feated Villanova ll-O and 13-O. In the final game of the season they fell to undefeated Brown 15-8 and 8-6, while giving the Bruins their roughest game of the year. ,. Wifi' ,, P . , - gr. ' KW -:-- .- -- 4 NN, fa 3 -I Q -aut ..,.-- M K A 3 . 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IA., M , hr, ,NCQ ' 'S' ' T'-m5ifQfWW,ff-wsii ' X 5 if 'Q was .Y W-AL. ' -vi ge nfs: A WW ,.,.,M X...-N. -img .tvs ...sf ,, , X ., ,.-,,. --.,...,,,,g3 V ,.,-am,-LM. , f - ,- -, -...,.. XF.,-,g , .. I--na Wim. . Mas: S S'9o' ,,g 'F , lx -s -we 1- Q- , rt A '7V' .va .sdhgli f 1+ . t. - gaswie-fra, 1525, -W -ef' 'F - N vs- - iw Q- .14 - +. 2, .H ,gin , .,4 ..iss...ww -.K- -qs -P' f '-'-'.,....- f ' ,za 1 ' 'f'i7q ' 1 ' .wi ' '22 , ' ... . ', as - , ' ? gr N - Q, re r 1 , ' -' .-,, of A ' fe-F -f-if ...si - - A My -Q We ' I ., '. - 4 ---- -4 , ,Q rf ten 4-'fu j' .E 1, 3 a,LgSffi..q ge? vi l ei?-Q, Rmb- , Y - ' z -e ,.s,,'1:.:sw.f vsrgggy i -A L 5 , S ffgi 54 ,Q X . ,W if if :X--W fi r . . - Q . l f?5+1i az,:a . , ' 53 .W-H W -- -. -f-.- . : .f as - - -- ' I A-. ' W, , Q. 1 . is if ,zggw-:3Q,fgp w as ...af '! ' 'A . WSJ ' '- E ' ,,ii5 'i Leif '. ee-,af - 'ffm ek . sera -f f g 4 1 at t, Vx V N rg. Eyavqggg - ff f i af? . -t Qziff 'Lis A i g ms-, . Q if: ' Lf . fe Tqiir- 'S :X I ,V 4 ' I-Q-',:i.g.,:,.A yi fi, Ygh, ,ui ' ,rlf , . f I.. Lg. , . I . 71 V . g . ,A-'vlgijv fa.: gf rg, .t I ' A 'ij f - . 7 ' ' T041 :i+, w s? y, t 1 - W. -W-X 5'3iT'.',.,.,,. UL.. ai i I 1' ' 1 1 5 Q . ,:.-1,,.x.,.j,gg- , 1 1 y at :gi A . i ' I Q, V-rw--H x ,....,,.,...:.3,J-..- - , ' 1- , ,........ - : ' ...,g..,....--Q-f,-J' V Q , T-1 Q: W.-. ..,. ...f .na . , ..,. ....:...... , .. 1-' ........ ...-.... ., -.,,,,. ' ...I- 'J'n Q I 1' p -A Q , Crew After just two years as an organized team, the Holy Cross Crew has established itself as a definite con- tender in the small college ranks. In its first season, the heavyweights finished ahead of five crews and lost to eighteen. In 1966, the crew won eighteen and lost fifteen. This is a greater accomplishment than it may seem, since the team went through the season without a coach. The season began with a strenuous week of double workouts on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia. The crew logged over one hundred and twenty miles in their six days of practice. As soon as Lake Quinsigamond was free of ice, the crew was out practicing in boats borrowed from the Shrewsbury Boat Club. One week later, the crew went to New York for its first test. It made an im- pressive showing by finishing one stroke behind the George Washington University Crew in its drive to the Grimaldi Cup. Holy Cross returned home to win a competition on Quinsigamond, but lost the Worcester Championship to Clark the following weekend. After failing to qualify for the Rusty Callow Championships, Holy Cross traveled to Philadelphia for the Dad Vail Regatta, the small college equivalent of the East- ern Sprints. Holy Cross qualified on Friday after- noon. The crew members of the qualifying shell were Ed Grygiel, Dick Liguori, Tom Lamb, Bernie Dougherty, Pat Dietz, and Phil jonik. The subs were Dan jordan and Frank Kirby. On Saturday after- noon, the crew made a respectable showing, finishing eleventh out of twenty-three entries. Among the teams it beat were Clark and Notre Dame. A In 1967, the prospects for the crew appear even brighter. Under the direction of Co-captains Ralph Orlandello and Dan Jordan, the team has acquired its first racing shell, the Mamie Reilly. This, with the acquisition of a new coach, should make the Holy Cross Crew even more formidable. -'i' When the Holy Cross varsity tennis team began its 1966 season, two problems were outstanding. First, it lacked experience. Five of last year's starting six had graduated, leaving junior Captain Ken LaVine, as the only returning letterman. So the team naturally did not have depth. However, with constant practice and good team spirit, both obstacles were overcome as I.aVine and five sophomores, Dick DiGeorgio, Pat Clancy, Art johnson, Bill Connolly, and Louie Big- liani, led the Crusader team to a winning season marred only by a cold, rainy spring which forced many cancellations. With Tufts rained out, the tennis team opened up against New Hampshire and scored their first win in a closely fought match. Babson was the next to fall to the young Crusaders. However, lack of team play caused two subsequent losses to tough Brandeis and University of Mass. teams. H. C. bounced back and soundly defeated a strug- gling Merrimack team. An extremely cold and windy day forced Stonehill and Holy Cross to play a de- fensive game with Stonehill coming out on top. Next, a typically strong Trinity team had no trouble in defeating the Cross. But this was the Crusaders' last loss as they went on to score victories over Wor- cester Tech, Assumption, and finally Boston College, thus posting a season's record of six wins and four losses. f -f'Y'.fw, 'J 5 1 V, xx? f r mg' fry, A' 4 Y 1 iq , .W 'ar if ' li .wx-' Q' 1 Q. 17 iq 1 ML- LYEYWJ X ' Q5 9 K 1 ' iw'-v' fnmf, 'N'-n Mr i V , 4 ' f 'Xl' i ., 4' yi 8' 'V , ,lql , , 3 - A M ,fi 11::::n45 'w - : M, ' w ,iw 449' ,Q R, wg'.,ii'.La3' ' an ,I .6 his Y 95 41. -- gg V we , , I .X 1 Y Y Q A p N , . ,- u X ' -W,-.Q , WW jpg., 4 , t x x--.-:Mid it ' Q U ey I' M fc, ' ' A, , , wt '5 r Q 4 X ' f'Af ff , X A j , f' 'f X , N vnu. f Q - .' Q ' is t L W . . .1 All ,f y I , as I , lr 2 5 M yr 1' ,- , f ,ff A 5 512' f H: 'ff ' ,, 3 ' x .3 ,V , J ' 3 if Q Q a fm 45 X 111 ..gxv9-tv 'gf' .f , The late Hop Ropel stated in April 1966, before his final season as Holy Cross baseball coach, that we're in a rebuilding year. Hop's final pre-season pre- diction couldn't have been more true. The varsity baseball team's 11-7 record signified a talented but an eratic team. Eight lettermen were lost from the 17-5 '65 squad including the two top pitchers, Bud Knittel and Jim Bidwell. Therefore only five regulars returned, outlielders Tom Kelly and jack Avis, catcher Jack McCarthy, shortstop Kevin Foster and pitcher Elliott Klein. Senior Klein opened up the season at Amherst, and pitched well after a shaky start, but saw his infield fail to support him as their four errors cost him a 5-3 decision. Captain John Kerry, centerfielder Tom Kelly and sophomore rightfielder jim Lee all banged out two hits, while second baseman Paul Kerns provided the power with a leadoff homer in the top of the fourth. The first home contest was next and the Friars of Providence College provided the opposition in what turned out to be the most exciting game of the season. It was the first of three extra inning battles the Crusaders played during the '66 season and they came out on top 4-3 in ten innings. junior first baseman Tony Kopec came through as the hero when he stepped to the plate with one out in the tenth following john Kerry's and jack McCarthy's suc- cessive singles. Tony latched onto a fastball and rocketed it onto the track in deep right center for a double, some 400 feet from the plate, to break the 3-3 deadlock. The big lefty had put the Cross out in front in the first inning with a two-run triple in almost the same spot as the winning clout. Jack Avis singled him home and that, plus the ending blow, was all sophomore reliever jim Goodwin needed to nail down HC's first victory of the campaign. Two more victories followed in the next two days, an easy 11-2 clobbering of U-Mass and a 6-4 deci- sion over AIC. The Redmen from Amherst came into Worcester with a 10-0 slate only to see the Cross score seven runs in the Hrst two innings. junior left fielder jack Avis' 425 ft. two-run homer led the 12 hit barrage, which also included three hits by Tom Kelly and two apiece by Jim Lee, Danny Mur- taugh and Kevin Foster. Elliot Klein evened up his record at 1-1 with a smooth six-hitter. The team was a thankful recipient of AIC's gen- erosity at Springfield while gaining its third success in as many days. The Crusaders, outhit by a 12-9 margin, downed the Aces, 6-4 in a game that saw the home team commit seven errors afield, while mak- ing several mental blunders. Jack Dolan went the route for his first victory of the season and was supported chiefly by Tom Kelly, who had two hits in four trips, making his four game total nine for Hfteen-a .600 average. The win streak was briefly interrupted with a 9-5 drubbing at the hands of an unbeaten Colby squad. Three more successes followed through: 1-0 over Seton Hall, 14-6, vs. BU, and 9-7 against Dartmouth. The Seton Hall game was the best-played game of the season. Elliot Klein and Billy Matusy hooked up in a duel of righties. Klein pitched a two-hitter and Matusy a three-hitter, with the only run being scored by Hawk McCarthy after singling, moving to third on Kopec's single, and coming home on Matusy's errant pick-off attempt on Kopec. 107 Baseball ff i 'A ,jUlY C X54 . . , t --ra ' V' ' -'V , - f - -Y nag - if 'tl' . 4 - ' -'Dull ' .-.s. 'M' V X ' '- p - ' 'F V 5 45- .. .v -,, gs - p 8 1' , - -Na+' V ' V i 5- A' ff -'2!'!Z'f'Z,9z9wrm-in r ,' I -. 1 -il-' 25553154 , . Q , . ' 'T .il-iiaafm if '.,x 1- 5 -r - s is we Q ' - , 4. 1 .. Y 5 -, , w 'A '- W I Q A , W A I Q D 4 To ,Q . f -1 J g Q, -A , 1 , 'HZ' 1 . ' . . , ,4 f- ,' Z ,V I at an A . - 1 . 1 5 .L Y A -it' .. a . 108 QQ' l V Ty ' ' ur ' , no . -?liif-iff-'fs-:W ' , , 5 - iw :Yi-Ji,- '5 ,s?v.v 4- pr Q in A iv V ',,,,,S'2f't 'gil' -, ':c'i1fS',s3f.',Iai ,E?1'i-'fj'f'?v.5W' A 31 , - W4 tr Q 1 ly.-r: i9-g zi..5ir.1'ff-i4.?Ei:'i:E 'ff 1 Tom Kelly headed a 19-hit attack that gave the Cross their nfth season victory over weak Boston University. The Crusaders broke a 5-5 tie in the fifth inning with a single run and then went on a scoring binge with four runs apiece in the sixth and seventh innings. Kelly's live hits and two RBI's, Kevin Foster's 3 hits, Danny Murtaugh's 3 hits, along with another good relief job by soph jim Goodwin, gave john Dolan his second victory. A four-run eight-inning uprising sparked by win- ning pitcher Elliot Klein gave HC a 9-7 victory over Dartmouth. The senior righty knocked in the tying run and scored what proved to be the winning run as the Crusaders fought back from a 6-5 deficit. The Purple then reverted back to the opening games inept defense, committed live errors, and handed Yale a 7-4 victory, an important loss in the eyes of the NCAA committee. The third and final three game win streak fol- lowed-6-3 at Tufts, 9-4 at Providence and 5-5 over Springfield in Worcester-and brought HC' s record to a still respectable 9-3. The name Tom Kelly again came to the fore in the victories over both Tufts and Providence. His three singles and a double along with catcher Earl Ki.rmser's two-run insurance single in the ninth against Tufts gave Elliot Klein his fourth victory of the season. This was the first of six games missed by catcher Jack McCarthy, due to what was then an unknown ailment and later turned out to be tonsil- itis. The second victory of the year over Providence was a breeze for john Dolan's third success without a loss. Kelly, now batting third in the order instead of leadoff, banged out three consecutive doubles in four trips to the plate. Earl KlImSCI,S suicide squeeze with one out in the bottom of the sixth scored jim Lee with what proved to be the winning run as Elliot Klein went all the way in the victory over Springfield. Two close loses in a row to Northeastern 7-6 and to Harvard 6-5 in 15 innings-plus a 5-O white- wash by BC knocked HC out of any NCAA tourney hopes. The Harvard game went into the HC bottom of the ninth with Harvard leading 4-5. Here came the most the exciting and yet fearful play of the year. Paul Stagliano, the stocky halfback, had pinch-hit a .3 nw! ,A ground-rule double and moved to third on now healthy Jack McCarthy's single. jack Sheehan flied to left and outfielder john Dockery's perfect relay seemingly had Stagliano at the plate. But Paul had other ideas. He barrelled into catcher joe 0'Donnell, a football guard, knocking himself, G'Donnell and the ball out of the picture and landed unconscious on home-plate with the tying run. The Cross closed the season with a 2-1 ten inning triumph over Fairfield, an 8-6 loss to Dartmouth and a 2-1 season ending victory over BC. Against the NCAA regional tourney-bound Eagles, with the score tied 1-1 in the last of the ninth, Danny Mur- taugh walked and took second on jack McCarthy's single. The pair then pulled a double steal and when the throw to third went into left field, Murtaugh was blocked and waved home on an interference call. The victory was the only varsity major sport triumph over Boston College all year. The rebuilding year was over, Hop Riopel's final season as HC coach had passed also. Tom Kelly was deservingly named All-American after batting .410 and with only three regulars graduated, the prospects for the '67 season were very bright. -4445. I X 1, I Q., olf The 1966 Crusader golf team enjoyed its most suc- cessful season in recent years, posting a 10-5 record. Paced by two extra-hole wins by Paul DeBarros, Holy Cross got off to a fast start and defeated Dartmouth, Worcester Tech, Amherst, and Brown. The team's winning streak ended harshly, however, when they traveled to Yale and were handed a 7-0 blanking. The next match saw Holy Cross gain a splitg losing to Harvard 4-3, but defeating Brandeis 6-1. After being edged by Army 4-3, the golfers went to Hanover to battle Dartmouth for the second time. Outstanding performances by john Anderson and Paul Perry, who won in extra-holes, enabled Holy Cross to win 4-3. The win was especially gratifying since Dartmouth is known as a team tough to beat on their home course. Two wins over arch-rival B.C. compensated for a 5-2 loss at the University of Mass., and brought Holy Cross on to face Providence, the 1965 New England Champions. The Cross rose to the occasion and won 4-3. Instrumental in this fine victory were the per- formances of Larry Corbett and Charlie Cangemi. After a disappointing showing in the Eastern and New England Championships, the team came down to the final day with a 9-4 record. Rain fell hard that day and Holy Cross split, dropping a 5M-lb decision to Fairfield while shutting out Stonehill 7-0. The 1967 season will see the return of five of the irst seven golfers, led by Captain-elect John Ander- son. In view of their fine performance in 1966, the team envisions an even more successful campaign in 1967. Yacht Club This past year's edition of the Yacht Club met with great success during its Spring and Fall sessions. The highlight of the year came last May when the Holy Cross Yachtmen both hosted and won a Pen- tagonal Regatta on Lake Quinsigamond despite un- settled weather conditions and extremely close com- petition. The Spring season started at the Tufts Univer- sity Yacht Club, sight of the New England Dinghy Eliminations. The Holy Cross Sailors finished third in a field of nine schools entered. On the following weekend Tufts was also host of an Intersectional Invitational for the Friis Trophy. This time Holy Cross crossed the line fifth in com- petition with fourteen other schools. The Fall season saw three more regattas for the Yacht Club. The Club was once again a successful host as it finished second behind Brandeis in competi- tion for the Danaghy Bowl. Holy Cross donated the award in memory of Bishop Donaghy, a heroic mis- sionary who suffered at the hands of the Chinese Communists. The Yachtmen's two other regattas were at Tufts for the Lane Trophy at the beginning of the season and an Undecagonal to close out the year. In both events Holy Cross finished in about the middle of the field of entrants. This was one of the most successful years for the Club in recent memory. There has also been a sub- stantial increase in membership over previous years. The Club is being led by Commodore Harold Clark. Also serving as officers were Vice Commodore John Cavicchi, Treasurer joseph Conway, and Sec- retary Francis Reed. mf- 3, ,n ,- sf ' my .., f .. 1904 Lacrosse .- --1 The Holy Cross Lacrosse team suffered another dis- appointing season last spring. Although the leader- ship of Co-captains Crusader of the Year Tom Foley and star goalie Pete Benotti was excellent, the team could not overcome the strong opposition as the Cross faced one of the toughest schedules in New England. The club got off to an auspicious start when they defeated Catholic rival Georgetown on the southern trip. A large Washington-area crowd was on hand to see the Purple overpower G.U. 6-2. Inexperience Was, as usual, the key factor in the regular season, and in the opener Dartmouth massacred the Crusad- ers 18-2. Sophomore standout john Vironis drew a lot of at- tention after tossing in six goals during the team's first victory of the season against the University of Connecticut. joe Tepas scored four more times in the rout which saw the Crusaders do everything right. The two attackmen worked exceptionally well all sea- son, and proved to be a constant threat to the op- ponent's defense. Only a shoulder injury kept goalie Benotti from All-American honors. Pete led the nation in saves after being runner-up his junior year. His acrobatics kept Holy Cross in many ball games, and he and Foley provided the spark that kept spirit alive throughout the season. Benotti was ably protected by defensemen Dave Wallingford, John Gorrer, and Bill Donnelly. Q S . x I 5 x 1 .Q..v.s2 us.xx'cNsxxxxxx-wxasszsxxwAw.gillllnhnun The Crusaders almost engineered the upset of the year when Ivy powerhouse Brown could manage only a 2-1 lead at halftime. The Bruins' depth proved too much in the fourth quarter, however, and they came out on top of an ll-2 verdict. The most exciting game of the year was against the University of New Hampshire. Holy Cross had never beaten U.N.H., and were out to break their string. Goals by Ed Dimon and Fath Mathews in the last two minutes gave H.C. a 5-4 lead, but New Hampshire drove home two goals in the final seconds to win 6-5. Strong teams from Tufts and M.I.T. came to Mt. St. james and found blizzards. On both occasions the two clubs made it back to Boston with two goal decisions. jim Carletti and Lou Nunez led the scor- ing against the jumbos, while Vironis and Foley had markers against M.I.T. City rival Worcester Tech proved tougher than expected, but the Crusaders turned them back 7-2. Paul Doyle and Mike Lambert led the scoring from midfield, while Tepas and Vironis shot well from inside. Once again goalie Benotti was brilliant. Harvard, C. W. Post, Wesleyan, and Trinity scored decisive victories over Holy Cross, although the Purple were not the whipping boys that they had been in previous years. With a large number of returning lettermen and a fine group of sophomores, the 1967 team should be one of the best in Holy Cross history. .wha ting 'Wm fx QD, n-J -Q 9 a. , 'f . f-ig ,1 1--r v ' L 4-f ?:i--f ff' - 4 , - - -,..:,4V.,Img-EQ ' N I 1 ' lr' H Y 'gf' r L Q -' A ., 4 mfg. , e 'ia , 5 I 5 5 ' . f' L 1 43, .SC Vw Q Q pus 3 0nly el moment' ' s K u moment of ytrengtlo, of romance, of glamour -of youth! A flick offunfbine upon at ,rtmnge fbore the time to remembeig tloe time or et yi IJ, mul' 8 -good-I9ye!- Night - Good-bye . ntleifgmciuettes . . 'IDD joseph Conrad 11 ALUMNI I-Top row: W. Moncevicz, P. Gebuhr, E. Mur- phy, J. Kane, V. Lewandowsky, N. Ryan, F. Minelli. Second row: F. Murphy, J. Mahon, W. Baez, G. McGuane, F. Kennedy. Third row: J. Metzger, J. Leonard, B. Lennon, K. Smaha, E. McCarthy, T. Burns. Fourth row: R. Wellington, A. Martin, 1. McGarry, R. Nicholson, D. Lalley, H. Turk. Fifth row: J. Cartney, R. Cole, D. Kinnelly, T. Yentsch. Sixth row: I. Horan, R. Kelly, M. Luciano, J. Sweeney, P. Skowron, K. Buck, T. McDermott. Seventh row: D. Mon- agle, E. Hagan, J. Foley, J. Minihan, W. Hermann, J. Folletti. it ALUMINI II-Top row: T. Futynski, J. Connolly, D. Schoetz, R. DeShay, R. DeAngelis, F. Creedon, F. Kelley, S. Higgins, S. Davies. Second row: A. Foquidice, F. Catania, M. Buxeda, J. Quiris, S. Neubeck, J. Schwarz. Third row: T. Neagle, W. Farney, M. Young, E. Lenox, R. Mascitelli, P. Murray. Fourth row: R. Shamback, W. Bugg, J. Imse, J. O'Mealy, T. Dickinson, C. Shaw.Fifth row: I.. Smith, J. Mayotte, I. Collins, J. Milligan, P. Holt, T. Stewart, W. Santielli. Sixth row: P. Creevy, C. Lynch, G. Cooper, D. Morgan, G. Nowell. ALUMNI III-Top row: R. Pierce, RA, J. Blewitt, I O'Neill, J. Day, M. McGann, E. O'Hearn, M. Clougher ty, R. Conner, D. Gatekunst, T. Delaney, C. O'Connor R. Nenrwick, S. jutras, S. Conlon, W. Hayes, RA, J O'Sullivan, M. O'Neill, R. Logan, E. Murphy, J. Morgan Second row: T. Burke, R. Coleman, D. Connors, B Kelly, G. Nolan, J. Dorey, W. Gavry, G. Humphreys T. Kane. Third row: A. Papale, E. Mollicone, J. Cerre- tani, P. Mudd, P. Natarelli, M. Hopkins. .f 1 I QL . K' 4 1 E ' ......, 'S ' ef .iii Q ,y - -n 1-ni 1 1 H1 . . , ..5 5' Ti . . A ,fig -J.: - Q -, f ' '1 1i4i't?Q -1 ,4- , r,5' ' . 'u l ' .L, ,wx 4 A - :- -.. ,. ' ' ' 'A 5 Iii-31131 . W M v 4 M , . iii -- - -.r 4. V' - ' . ' ' A I M -l 'f - 1 x . .v . , A , -Q-011 'TA' J ' fi' , n . . A 3. 4 :E i Yif -1'-vt: -I-'-' '- 1. ' ' ' fgjg - 3 ' nf .41 ' .4 - -' AJ - . . - .? - - gif, 251 .. ' - - flff ,, N 1 3. ' :i'. 3.2. Q . A ,. 1 In .:.Y,,,,.-1... Si. ,,,f . l V Wy, .gil : f ' pg ' .. , -1 fs' , ,f , , .4 Q53 - I Z 4 .,,,., ,,.-f .1 ya: -... 3,-DY.: I? V ' H, A rf ' - . r-' ,A 3 x ' Y - A .. -':'-'-- .fx 13.31 4:-Q' ' , .NA .. .- - .. L,-:az - sn--1,--qi -3518-' 'T' 45 ur W, '- r J- --.. W... ....-- ,A . 'fi ., P , . .AI un-nucuuvl-I . ' ' . S ' ' 1 .1-Se. l ui 2 'I Q. -36 0 , as JL 1 ll ,- BEAVEN I-Top row: R. Quinn, T. Vaccariello, I. Mc- Ginn, R. Noeth, T. Shea, K. Witham. Second row: M. Beert, T. Muri, D. Mulvey, T. Graefe, R. Dufresne, J. Fienup. Third row: J. Dobrovolsky, A. Flagg, M. Doyle, P. Purcell, E. White. Fourth row: M. Clare, S. Mc- Donough, B. McIntyre, J. Tracy, P. Howard, K. Greene, S. Donovan. 119 BEAVEN II-Top row: P. Greogan, G. McGarry, F. Baker, P. Tierney, H. Dick Second row: R. Anastasi, D. Golia, W. Scannell, Fr. Higgins SJ., R. Podolak, S. Bonsall, R. LeGendre, R. Hodgson, D. Libby, E. Litwin, W. Barry, J. Stearns R.A., J. Adamo, J. Demicco, N. Schulte, D. Allegra, E. Ready, J. Abbott, L. Thompson. Third row: D. Monashan, T. Healy, S. Zenyan, N. Muhilly, V. Bilotta R.A., P. Bagley, J. Ballway, A. Mutt, J. Hogan, D. Liuzzo, R. Bates, T. Nardin. 120 BEAVEN III-P. Plastino, C. Gruaka, D. Ma- honey, M. Burke, M. Parkin, S. Lucca, T. Viggi- ano, J. Twarag, G. Gillin, D. Regan, T. Martell C. Mangano, J. Dagle, M. Addonizio, B. Swain J. Monaco, J. Falvey. CARLIN I-Top row: J. Rollo, R. Daughters. Second row. J. Colgan, J. Houlihan, J. Largess, R. Gregory, M. Stanton S. Hackman, C. Fitzgerald. Third row: W. Hickey, J. Con- roy, B. Iulo, A. Coleman, S. DeMaggio, A. Consigli, L Bevilacqua, J. Hasulak, R. Rizzolo, A. Corraine, R. Warde J. Larson, P. Winne, K. Heffron, M. Ferrone, T. Baxter Fourth row: J. Alinoski, F. Werber, T. Delaney, K. Muloy M. Cipola, J. Bevilacqua, D. Giblin, J. Collins, J. Stormes M. Dailey, M. Higgins. ,I 3 CARLIN II--Top row: T. Dubrava, R. Clancy, W. joy, J Hunter, T. Hathaway, N. Collins, R. Maigret, G. Dawson D. Daly, P. Young, R. Powderly, D. Croughan, G. Brady. Second row: R. Collins, J. Cooney, R. Frank, S. Treanor, R. Cunney, J. Stanton, J. Callahan, D. Drinan, G. Huguet, T. Sweeney, J. Fallon, R. Devaney, K. Trornbly. x B X .Y CARLIN HI-Top row: I.. Svirchev, S. Flynn, T. Doyle B. Dewey, T. Olbez. Second row: T. DuLaney, P. Harley B. Dubord, T. Stefens, D. johnson, K. Joyce, J. Gordon Third row: J. Delaney. N. Hourihan, M. Debaggis Fourth row: D. Voerman, S. Clark, D. Sullivan, D Wakh, W. Torpey, M. Riley. CLARK I-Top row: J. Foraste, P. McLaughlin, T. Lafache T. Coleman, J. Murtaugh, A. Conolly, R. Bitteker, P Darnanti, W. Tucker, H. Pereira, M. Orecchia, M. Minasz P. Bates. Second row: J. Scanlon. Third row: T. Hernacki T. Ahern, D. Van Knapp, D. Maloney, R. Murray, P. Stu benvoll, R. Biondi, W. Neagle, P. Singleton. CLARK II-Top row: A. Stranger, T. Norton, R. Rappoli, R. Coan, B. Ticho, T. Kelly, D. Coddaire, S. Power, D. Stansfield, D. Scribner, W. Martin, T. Amy, R. Regan, R. English, R. Powers, J. Edwards, V. Brown, M. Egan. Second row: H. deGive, E. Mauceri, R. Gillespie, J. Quinn, J. Di- Marzo, T. Morris, P. DeBarros, V. Nicolais, J. Pane, L. Corbett R.A., E. Russo R.A., S. Sayewich, G. Robichaud, R. Milk, R. Courtney, P. Doyle, R. Nolan, R. Pasucci. Seated: R. Basanta, J. Dillon, M. Kenny, W. Monti. fl-rf YV Q- ., . V r ,- 'E' QRW3' ff ug , .bi 5 SEQ. '1 0 E - 'A ' X P' 'mx 1- b . . 5- 4 fm: r ff X' - . ii N, Vi W ,V -. 1' A . -:. A Q Magi 5Qf? '-TW f fi- - if 'vi ' 0 1 'f Ai 4 -Q ,, 4 . ' A -Q M2,,1,x L , 4 ' ,K .g6f 'fW u6'1gAM,1, X L, G . 3-Q ,- ,affa mt .wdzf-' - X f P' F . . h 1 Q f 5fg MW Q, '-nf' ff' Xa 'f ' . M 'W 4'- v , . x Qu ,WV ii t Y 1- . ,X h A , M vs ,Q fm wiki 5 .W Q M '02 - - wasgwxxvllfbi , Q-.M , A43 -A-Q W ggi ,pr - . ,Q - ' me .Qu K wif-6 if, X .QF W A 'QQJM' 'Li - XX ,ff V ,gpwwl L x if - ... -a 'W A g , , ' S 'if 'Si 59 Q ,,,- we if Nui X o N l Q 'K' .1 4 x, YE 0 . N! WA.. Af, ,av 1,- Y Q 'SJ' .:.' ffm. ' 1 A--4's. f -ox. A fx A-5. ,A ,X ,.n ' V - 1 . an ., ,Mo .-,, CLARK IV-Top row: T. Ciurzak, W. Boudy, S. Mc- Neil, D. Klecak, R. McGuire, J. Miller, J. Crowley, T. O'Dor1r1ell, J. Dowling, D. Walsh, J. Cormally, R. Kab- lick. E. Durnan. J. Goodwin. QB! I I IEE -..........s.. 4 3 4 -4 5 Q. :VEB-4. df 'WP 2: v 77 f QQ -' fFf'5 4E55-T '5 , ,,.- 5, f?4,Q ' '. ,fig fl ,ffliffgiff , , ,gp mf' -M - 5 ' V V ' Eff '451'-'92 L- -i . g F- M:-4 . 2411 --f SW' ' . . -f- .1 wwf: - -EE:-, 3W4'Qsf . .Q-'rg gizffffx 'R . ' if , . , 4 -Q '.-ZH gg' K, !isT:.!'iSFf m Q-mg: E23 Y -- E-1E?'Qv ,:'f'f' fa' I ' . 1 , gh- 1 , .- Y. I' V ,.-J -,Q vi Y - ,,, ff ,YJ J, ---' ..- ' 1 , .. - Q..- Vfezifm-A -W S 4- ,W , B.: ., f .1 ,ff - ,.. - au 1-,-C . , ' v ,. ,N '..,- 'A f ,.f-' ' - l sl P M .14 Q Nf' ww t L Q s 'I V. .! Ja- ,9,fV- M iripwiv M - S4 nv ,Jn-14' -r -' A -'P h --'s'f3 ,. . f- F -s 's. 4 lxll. - 473' i 4-, Ja, s' - w l '-. M -f '- P2-V xdgi-fm R J-Q -if-1-. Q, - J-W. , ,f A Jw ,N ?,,. .,,..--f--4- Y. -3, N N, v 1 ,Q 1- A--1? p nga- ' ' ,, 1 'EY H.. - -.x4.fi . .Ani AL.. -' 128 I n1'... L- ., Q- Pg-sf' ,qgfp 11 muff is-.,, 4513 Q, .-, .J -W HANSELMAN I-Top row: J. Fulham, G. Gallzfer, P. Pf1s- ter, J. Foley, J. Hennigan, F. Topez, J. Ryan, R. Ducauas, B Berthiume, P. Steubben, R. Sabella, W. johnson, G. Sch- Wartz, R. Cassano, J. Cannon, W. Dugan, R. Rodgers. Sec- ond row: G. Woeppel, E. Sessa, W. Rochwood, D. Fontana NWN. Y.. HANSELM'AN II-From left: S. Robb, G. Pernber, Eyerman, H. Leahy, 1. Pulito, W. Mussone, R. Frigon, Baine, E. Petrazzolo, C. O'Neil, A. Blum, W. Simmons Legnarcl, D. Rossin, 1. Incorvaia, L. Dean, T. O'Connor Schlottrnan, S. Demanovich. I2 HANSELMAN III-D. O'Nei1, S. Keller, F. Crowly, F Hessian, J. Barry, J. Lyons, P. Russioniello, T. Moline, B McGovern, T. Martin, T. Lombardo, B. Mecca, 1. McGrath T. D'Agata, T. Martin, T. Nolan, P. Mahoney, P. Ripton R. Ganswindt. HANSELMAN IV--D. Murphy, R. Pepe, R. Statile, J Taylor, J. Carroll, F. Hartig, M. O'Leary, T. Donlan, J Brdbury, B. Ryan. 'rn 1 xx I 1- I 4 nu. 'I 1 I 1 xixka .x' XXX X I r , 4 J - gk F-X' X X 5 HEALY I-Top row: J. Garand, T. Lamb, W. Guertin, J. Trayers, J. Scavone, T. Thornhill, D. Thomas, D. Studley, S. Golden, F. Grein, T. Sada, R. DeAngelis. Bottom row: J. Bioti, F. Giknis. 9 1.13 Cv-7' 45:25 I 4 1 I Y-f H 4 HEALY II-Top row: P. Wantman, F. Check, A. Flynn, F. Callahan, E. Dignan, J. Stansfleld, P. Grumbach. Kneeling: J. Anderson. 9 ij If . i fi' 127 134 f - HIEALY III-Top row: T. Brown, W. Gardner, J. Burns, J. Tasca, J Horan, D. O'Connor, J. johnson. Second row: M. Sullivan, D. Shanks D. Winkler, R. King, R. Lawlor, G. Porter. Third row: G. Arcaro H. D'Ambrosio, G. Robinson, 1. Carey, J. Hopkins, G. Kelly, W Hyde, M. Canning, T. Morris. Fourth row: C. Meierdiercks, F. Caro- lan, L. Rienzi, J. Brazinski, J. Norris, R. Johnsen, W. Cascio. HEALY IV-Top row: J. Angyal, J. Mogan, j. Burke, B. Stevens, B. Orsini, P. Joyce, D. Fravel, M. Yakaitis, J. Couture, E. Bourdon, G. Coskren, C. Restivo. Second row: B. Bass, E. Bartlett, J. Morrison, P. Blanchette, H. Wroblew- ski, B. Heller. LEHY II-From left: B. Graham, R Schiebel, A. Lebreck, J. Mescher, L Bigliarri, R. Slervan, J. Mulry, M. Adams P. Welch, D. Moynihan, J. O'Donnel1: K. Hochstein, P. Cangerni, J. Moore, K Mast, J. Uhl, J. Metzler, E. Hughes, E Siudut, M. Beekman, F. Loker. .4-4 - I' 4 V ,, f I if '.. 35 , , ,Cs A M4 ff, I ' ff . , NY-5 Q A 4' - M ,uw ' - V: ' 4' .' ffxr T' ?' wil. . , A sq.,-f 34 fe, 'Q y 43' A . .1 7 up 5, a N vw , f 455:- 'Z ' ' A , mf Q I , ,fu fir -qqwsk ff. f,fz,,Fs J 3,5 14 1 ' 1 ' fa. 'ii' if : l re 1 r4i,'A' ggffgffgf is ,21 1 D' 1 l gi i . Q 'yfii ' z 57.4.5317 :ll x Jflla 5 avi 1 9, 0 as-LQ ,,,g,,w y . I J 4'L ' 'ffiii 1. 1 fffig' 4QQ3'w . ' ,' j 133: ' A If ' 'xii-rg Q- 7ff3'f':'3,5- .- A-,. S f, . Nux., g L'-'Q g' -2 , f---.. f3f?'i, 7'?f72 X - 4 ' gig? VQB- f ----. B- i.g3551yj55,g b f-LQXLWW Q- Ki 'rfy'-T f -,.,,,f.. xQ 'fw-ek: 1 it gig? fi if A--1... t. 'fiifff - A fr 5 'f 4- -far' .W ' , 'i- 3 E ' A H I 'fu V I N i f f f, if Af 'if : ' . - Q, I, 53 - A' - V ls ' I 'V' A, r . , - i df , 1? my i , I J 5 s .g,,, Q ... , If X . , s ' Q. A, a 1 O ' . 0 s S 0 5 Q 1,1 ,ff . 1 Dy. 'f 7 if f ., 1 f '51 ' ww ' f f 1 ' 0 -. P v : s 's,, y S4 .1 E'--,':' 5 4... 4 ' 1 fl r, , . ,wi-5, ' 1.15-, P , ar N X: t 'lg' ' Q 1.5. f . :L f 3' ' ', .xy-is , , . 4, Ji., 2 if , .,, , i.. - 1 x, v 5' Tfv ' wa-. ' K pg: - f Vw Q , .I -A 'N 4 5 , A Q, V 1' , H L , 5 ,.vhQ ' A gf. A 3. , D , if A' 1 ff, I ii' , - p Lf - f - 1 HN . U nz 1 Ali' h Q 7 gi' fv- .2 .fvv .Y :Q-ui' Ti' ,K ff, ' -Q 6: '7 7. fig 'rv . V 5 2 1 'v if. I , ---an ,Q 'rv -f . 'Ml' f - E 4' fs.. G, lx' J- . if'.xln-- A.'1'T ' . ,.. , 4. '41 av M ,' . -sg' ,I Za ,fab yy! .b Jxybfl A . -- ,:,,'5 Y 'f wi Q, N- 'Nl 5, Q xxx ,lf'lx:N'-s 5 Rss, S? -xx- +5 ,Ns fbi ,NNNNN Q 2 ' 'ws ,,,,.av-' ,- ,'.-- T- Elf ,av 4 K ,-u- ,gn .- 2 L..- 91 v lad, i ACU QIOAE 'gifii ,ev LEHY IV-Top row: R. Kennedy, R. Buttina, J. Sheehan J. Lyons, E. Burke, D. Sullivan, P. Rettig, W. Herlihy, R Leydon, R. LeBlanc, J. Scull, R. Palonza, D. McNamara, J Blum. Second row: R. Lilore, W. Martin, P. Duffy, F. Grein R. Beam, J. Manning, T. Knittel, J. Fox, I. Gavin, I. Du: mais, A. Galiani. LEHY III-Top row: B. Kilfoil, G. Pisko- rowski, D. Reardon, F. Blum. Second row: P. Imse, T. Butler, D. Lynch. Third row: N. Clement, J. Dean, M. Daley, J. Mc- Carthy, J. O'Keefe. Fourth row: C. Becker, W. McGoey, J. McManus, K. Tepas, W. Murphy, K. Kitchell, R. Makovitch. WHEELER I-Top row : S. Higgins, C. Lynch, E. Hanel, F. Haines, T. Ryan, D. Jennings, D. Seelman, J. Phelan. Second row: J. Murphy, M. Noble, J. Leaghy, H. Price, T. Richards, D. Kolick, B. Mahon, J. Boesen, J. Corrado. Third row: R. Barry, R. Earp, T. Short, W. Klein, J. Belotti, I.. Reise, Fr. Desautels, S.J., J. Ryan. Fourth row: J. Grafton, R. Pierkowski, P. Michaud, J. Noll, T. Riley. r so f 'Tei Q f P E -.. .- . V f'f ' s ,XXYK ff' 156 , I If - I C Jil- 1' A ' 1 YTD Quik 5' A - J iv: ,- g .:: - l F, ,X I N - ' If 1. as f vx ' 4 Q I 'I I . ' -AJ' 'F' Q . , 1, P , A 'in ' Q, V fr i,..as-,Civ-, . '93,,?f2'a 1 if RPN .-- f 'lvfxl : :ik rw-' 'N-N ' 0 grim? ,P ' 'Ng an M ! In .r.i ,'E ew ,f I 5 ff, 'F r I2-'D' 73.-,, . V. ... ri, dr., 4- . ' , 4-. pf, ,,4.,.- '-41,471,415 fi .5- Y-,ij-,, .. ,-j-g'H'S'... Tfwx! - S Uv.: QW. 21+,.7'f,:-M, 5. .fjifzf-21' .-ffl' 2,4-. X -' '-,W'll x fkfrsf. 1- A ffz I-'ff GNQYL -- 'qkzik-J fs .- A 1 '1. ' J. 'L ' AL, 11- , . N . . f . . ST 39.2 f .. 5 ' 'Y V915 -, ,' .,-.2vlb2f5w...f.vt' 4f 7,3.-L3 .g T : , Q?-.. , . fffs, f C V 'lt' ' L 4.2, bf- A-f-l'?,Q'?11i f1'fr5i4f5 '441.-'JEL'-J:.- x, '-H fi- '-1 ix' fs' - - ik - .A- N L-fix-.-2+ -' '-'ii .,,. . ,-, - , , . , , - . fi--.,.-'+R-w. .,4 - .4 1m ....Lg-. !73 '- '. -t.-'5f1f-..-j6vfi-'.:,f,..i,-N'L- g 3'-zV..f.R .-.14- '.1.b!..'f-5w.a5l'55:.u..l?...-F . e'!lr.m.- s-f.J'9 . f- -P+ - -- I-M .- -vim -- 140 WHEELER II-Top row: S. Dwyer, M. Jeans, B. Walsh, 1. Glavin, J. Millerick, J. Hussey, J. Burke. Second row: J. Maloney, F. Arlinghaus, B. Pane, E. Reutemann, B. Seward, K. Hume, P. Drisgula, B. Henry, G. Heitzrnan, 1. Flana- gan, J. Sullivan. Third row: F. Rivara, B. Dunn, S. Duffy, R. Miller, D. Luciano, J. Pisciottoli, G. McKenna. Fourth row: M. Norris, C. Bishop, F. Schnell, P. Cassady, C. Eppin- ger, J. Bradly, J. Haran, B. Golden. Fifth row: J. Ferry, L. Iacoi, B. Pitocchelli, E. McGeachy. ff , , - N, 3 . -1 W' 4 r f., r,f sf? :I I. 'D ,-if-,,... 6 ,si Z 5. rg -Y , . f gil? 5' ,l 11. H if Q, g n X 5 , . ,fl Ax 1 Q M27 . ,P W Q-v-ff if 4 1 7 Q, l fam? ' : v: . . fix as . N..4.,,y Qixomagyhz 1 'HS KM, V Www : 7f' fr V' ..,....a .nr-X WHEELER III-T. Lea, F. Ahearn, T Donnelly, J. Coleman, F. Cullen, T. Sar- no, M. Olivo, T. Walmsley, J. jalil, D Smith, W. Mara, K. Pervier, M. Hoover, B. Monbouquette, W. Reed, L. Merkel, V. Ferri, M. Gauthier. - Y . V . Me' Q f Q 1 2 in VVHEELER IV-Top row: D. Briere, M. O'Sullivar1, T Bernardin, E. Carnbell, A. Frenzel, A. Arnanclolara, S Biere, I. Healey, W. Taylor. Second row: J. Sheehan, R Aiello, T. Bowes, M. Toohen, D, Sullivan, C. Galella K. Smith, K. Urlich, B. Frechette, T. Broderick, G LaRusso, M. Gregory, E. Kosta, T. Gaffney, J. Sheehan .S'ith3ng.' P. Atanasio. D 'I 0' 9 . 6 I C 4 WHEELER V-Top to bottom: A. Cas- cino, T. McCabe, J. Smith, J. Matthews, P. Shannon, C. Foley, J. Mulkeen, J. Leonard, L. Buckheit, J. Ripp, J. Calla- han, S. O'Nei1, F. Crawford. MULLEDY UNDERCLASSMEN-Top row: W. White, P. Herring, R. Kane, T. Andruskevitch. F. Lernister, J. Baldovin, T. Rocha, R. Finley. Second row: T. Jacobs, K. Kelly. LE 'P L'fg5 if ay-J He wolf like ez man who ytezndf upon ez bill above the town loe boy lefzg yet eloef not my The town 115' neon but turn! Ink eyey upon tloe elzlrtelnt yoezring mngex Thomas Wolfe Seniors THE LONELY CROWD Given in the beginning were two items, a class and a school. The class was a lonely crowd right out of the post-war baby boom seeking a space-age education. Half a thousand high school graduates gathered in a smoky, gray, mid- Massachusetts city to begin to learn and to start to compete, as compete they were told they must. It was a lonely crowd starting to try to talk in we terms rather than lonely crowd terms. The school was older and wiser than we-in the business to impart some of that wisdom once in a while. It was some- times alleged to be a place where purple banners float on high. But there weren't as many purple banners as there were crosses atop a Boston-ornate Fenwick Hall or dormi- tory rooms inside a government-subsidy, plain-style Healy Hall. The two items came together to stay that way for four years and see what they could do for each other. They met and talked and meshed and clashed. They interacted for nine months out of each four consecutive years, which is roughly 1,093 days, which is roughly 26,232 hours, which is roughly 1,573,920 minutes, which is certainly a long time. And behind it all there lurks a story. A short story about a long time. The entire story can't be entered into the record because each has his own details. But some of the better meshes and clashes were common to all and bear reviewing. Without poetry, without philosophy, without purple eye- glasses, we had all that in school. These, simply told, are the events-for the record. They began on Friday the Thirteenth of September in 1963. Our first year, above all, was one of casing the joint. You had to know the rules before playing this particular game. And, of rules, there were plenty. There was legislation covering class attendance and the same for Mass. Laws covered the consumption of milk in the Kimball Hall dining room and the use of electricity after ll p.m. And, if the rules about milk were strict, the laws about beverages more enlightening were prohibitive. There were rules less apparent, but more important, gov- erning what society in a purple atmosphere should be like. These were the norms which made Holy Cross something between a long-haired Ivy League and a no-cool Notre Dame. Rules upon rules upon unwritten morms. They had to be learned and it had also to be determined when they could be broken. We were aided in this by being welcomed and instructed almost to death. Helpful corridor prefects welcomed the Men of the Class of 1967. As did several faculty members and upper classmen during three years of mock classes in a new freshman orientation program. As did honorary class '15I!Qz 'xls-. - .. V- ---- ....,... .,.. --.,, ,, . - ---- ....., A W ' Yi ........ M M . .-.-......, WH' - N A , X- 5, i Y- M, Vp.: - ' ,uw ro ft' I' 4,1 7. ,.. .. -,. .. ... ..,,., I. ---w ,..,......a,.... , -f it ' ,raw-. 1-. f , , Q Q 4--fi,mg',,-it-f,g.': fx - , 1- ... .. --- -, ,, . , 6.f,i:.y 1. , i'.d,u, ....- gf' president Donald F. Romano, a man with a perpetual tan. We were oriented up one side, over the top and down the other. Then the upper classes rolled in, laughing like they knew what was up. School days began and with them a long academic haul-if four years is long enough. Four years during which names like Smilin' Jack, the Rookie, Dirty Dan and the Wedge stood on one side. And names like Mugs and Hawk, Fensco, Eagle and the Humpties faced off on the other. For four years these two groups were to watch each other over school room desks of many inscriptions. And, in between, there was often little but sometimes much. Life settled down to a second-gear drag when it was learned that some unprecedented coeds from Quinsigamond Community College didn't really want to mingle. The cafe- teria route was taken by some who weren't choosy about their coffee and were satisfied with juke-box offerings of Deep Purple and an occasional Cortina-Corrina Bob Dylan wail-all of which, put together, couldn't equal a Sugar Shack. The football team struggled through a mostly cold season while we learned more rules-one of which was, no matter where the girl is from, don't tell her you're a freshman. New heights were reached in hitch-hiking proficienqf and the mornings got crisper while the leaves got brighter and fell. And freshmen daily grew more adept in the use of interlinear trots, the stretching of seven class cuts into more and the writing of snow into little blue books. John F. Kennedy was shot. The man with restless energy for exploring new frontiers, the man with charm, with class, limousined into Dallas on a November afternoon, calling it a trip into nut country. And a little, pinch-faced warehouse hand with wild, dart- ing eyes crawled to a sixth-floor perch and let go with three lucky blasts. The President is shot . . . perhaps seriously . . . per- haps fatally, the news flash said. And it was fatal. The flag in front of Wheeler Hall limped at half-staE that Friday, and some of the sparkle of the '60s was gone. Such numbers of students left early for the Thanksgiving vacation which was to start the following week that school officials called off the whole show. We dispersed with the rest-coming back for the Boston College football game which was supposed to matter in Holy Cross hearts. Morris, Marcellinos, Kirmser, Policastro and others squeeked out a win on the wind-and-rain-swept Fitton Field. And it did matter, according to vocal pandemonium after the game. In one Saturday afternoon, Holy Cross produced a successful football season. We wondered if the lonely crowd could do the same when the time came and went back to classes. Life shifted down to first gear while snow began to fall. The Christmas banquet on a night appropriately snowy. And gears began to spin. That was the night an Irishman in the lower part of Wheeler zippoed a fire sprinkler in the ceiling and the Hoods came tumbling down. One little fire sprinkler can produce that much water? It sure can-and it can go a long way toward upshifting the spirits of a freshman class. Wheeler and Beaven residents seized the opportunity to unleash the ravages of water war- fare against each other and against themselves. Water Hew -in the liquid and crystallized states. The Irishman fell-a disciplinary casualty who hadn't yet learned when the rules could be successfully broken- but there were no other deaths. And we felt like going home for Christmas after that. Snow fell and fell, blanching the pine trees and mufliing the streets and sidewalks. Semester examinations mufiled the students. You're never going to learn it if you don't know it now. But an all-nighter might help. It was ironic that both things came at once-semester exam tension and a pile of snow. The two reacted just about then to produce a snowball fight of epic proportions. Raid Wheeler, the cry went up. Raid Beaven, came the reply. The seniors are out in back. And War Hated. Battle lines were drawn behind Wheeler, and a fierce fight was waged for the hill there. The upper classes lured the freshmen nearer and nearer the senior dormitories where enemy re- inforcements lay waiting. Chaos and a hasty retreat. For hours it went on and several pairs of spectacles were broken, but no heads. Who won? Depends on who you ask. It's generally agreed, however, that a campus cop lost. And the battle produced a posted note from the Rev. Charles J. Dunn, dean of men. He was against it. Another vacation and then the year's longest part through the winter and into early spring. The indicence of cabin fever was high. George Lawton and a cast of a few eked out one or two editions of the Page, the voice of the fresh- man class which generally talked orthodox words. Poverty struck, Lawton couldnlt take it any more and Bruce Clark finished the year in the editor's chair. Jay McLaughlin was elected class president on a politically non-controversial platform and Student Congress represen- tatives were chosen, except on Wheeler V which forgot to do so. Several tried drama but found that one of the school's rules is against drama that's too dramatic. A freshman workshop play called Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright lit a bright controversy and closed after one show. And most continued to study, with Richard J. Pedersen taking an early lead. Slowly, slowly, the winter cracked and lost its grip. Tem- peratures climbed and days lengthened. Buds peeped on branches between Wheeler and Beaven and the sun got friendly again. Suddenly, it was warm enough to play ball and learn that you can't read a book outside. The lonely crown had basically arrived. Those-in the majority-who had made it through the first semester's worst felt better this time around. They knew many of the rules and knew a little about how you play the angles in this game. But we still didn't know it all because fifteen of us were checking in each weekend with the Dean of Men's ofiice. Worcester police the night of the Georgetown basketball game had made a little visit to the 9-20 Motel. And, once there, they found a little party beginning to explode. The under-aged party-goers were in such great numbers that a school bus was brought around to take them to Waldo Street police headquarters for booking. And the party there lasted all night with the cockroaches and winos. The class I 1!'WI ' of -0 l 1 'a X .. heard the news, learning that arrest casualties equalled al- most a third of the residents on one corridor. And friends dug deep for money to post bond. Some fifteen of the lonely crowd had learned the rules, learned that they could be broken, but not how to break them with skill. This was the number that ended up getting to know the lady in the D.O. and becoming skilled hearts players and softball enthusiasts in the springtime sun. Others learned fun could be had more safely if under oliicial supervision. Such as that of the Outing Club at the Yellow Barn. Two-hundred cases of beer were demolished in a short time at a picnic there and everyone felt fine. Final exams loomed. Tom Fitzpatrick, on a class-unity ticket, was elected president for the next year. Some attended Junior Prom amid dubiously incombustible decorations in the fieldhouse. The exams came and most lived, the record showing the group twenty-five weaker at the year's end. By and large, the lonely crowd had shown itself fit to survive space-age education. So the lonely crowd was allowed to go home for the summer, officially recognized as no longer a crowd- now the Class of 1967. The World's Fair was in New York then and the shaggy new Beatles from England were singing I Want to Hold Your Hand in German-although some thought it lost quite a bit in translation. TI-IE PURPLE DIED In Vietnam, it was the year of escalation. In the United States, it was election year. At Holy Cross, it was Murphy's year. And all over, it was a year of constructive criticism with an occasional resultant change-the second quarter of our game. junior James Connor, a skinny 19 years old, may have set the pace of constructive criticism early in the year. He planted knckles on the schnozzes of two East Berlin border guards. Resultant change: normally stiff-lipped border guards, somewhat confused, loosen up and let the kid have his way. It was in a time of such events that our class settled into Carlin and Alumni Halls-the home where silverfish roam. lt was time made not so much of what we did as of what we witnessed. We moved into those cracked-plaster dormitories in sec- tions. There were sections of budding intramural supremacy on Carlin I and Ill. There was a football-baseball-basketball uw- 'qv .- .4 it department on Alumni III. There was a department of intelligentsia. There was a highlife department on Carlin II where none dared walk if he didn't know somebody. And, except for a couple of times, we settled back to see what might happen. For, at that time, events were in larger hands than those of slumping sophomores. Sophomores are bigger than freshmen but that, according to the norms, doesn't mean much. Sophomores don't have much clout. Unless you're Jack Lentz, Mike Cunnion or Charlie Domson. James Michael Murphy made some noise from Student Congress headquarters in the cafeteria. He wouldn't have been there except that the majority felt it was time for some noise. People were tired of watching the little stuff debated into the ground in Collegiate Affairs Discussion Groups and Student Congress meetings. They wanted ac- tion, strong action-now. Against a nickle rise in the price of donuts, for instance. We returned that year to find those carbohydrate concoctions with chocolate on top and jelly inside no longer boasted their traditional low, low price. A cry of protest arose and Murphy had a change to make. And, miracles of miracles, it worked. Thousands of flyers urging a cafeteria boycott were unnecessary. Thirty-two members of a Murphy goon squad didn't have to impose the strike. After one round of negotiations, the price of donuts reverted to pre-inflationary levels. Students liked that sort of thing. People stopped to read in The Crusader about a bearded leader with some funny lines and an ability to get things done-like lower the price of donuts. Things which mattered. It made even better reading when the sophomore who signed his name Chas. Domson began entering his own protests. Murphy, in a rash of irreverance, was doing away with the entire hallowed body of Roberts' Rules and making a farce of dignified meetings in hallowed Student Congress chambers. A vote for Domsom was a vote for Parliamentary dignity and he was elected representative from Carlin III. The Jim and Charlie show was on. The issues? Besides donuts, there were Playboy maga- zines, truncated Easter vacations and boycotts against retro- active failures, Those were days when 1,200 students might gather on slushy library steps to comiserate with a guy who had griped about his grade and lost. They marched in reverent silence to the Dean's office led by a dignified . . .. f .'iXf ' ,f 1 5 . , . 'Ewms' . 4 . . ..- V fr: H. , f t- f-gyf 'J ,41- X 2 JK af' 47, 'A Murphy in a black academic gown. And the Boston press convered it. Although nothing happened. All constructive criticism. The Rev. Martin Luther King protested bigotism in Selma, Ala., and received a kick in the teeth. Students took a cue from the Beatles' barber and then protested a war. Because, although Lyndon Baines John- son was elected President over Barry M. Goldwater because Goldwater looked and talked a little like a hawk, the war grew in size daily. American PT boats were shelled in the Gulf of Tonkin. Vietnamese earth was pockmarked by bombs from B-52s. And 400,000 American men were to be shipped over-as fighters, not advisors. Students protested, some constructively. It didn't matter that Playboy never made it to the caf, that you had to cut classes to get those four days at Easter, that the was dragged on and on. Criticism was the vogue and we saw it all. Mike Cunnion was throwing the football that year. And Holy Cross receivers persisted in connecting with his passes. Jack Lentz was running when Cunnion wasn't throwing. He ran enough to break a season rushing record set by a guy named Mel Massucco. Jack Lentz won the O'Me1ia award at a near-miss B.C. game, Dr. Eddie Anderson retired after steering 202 victories and Mel Massucco was football coach. Holy Cross students that year found that they didn't have to study as much theology, philosophy and Latin. Maybe some changes were being made. Tragedy touched Christmas vacation when Richard Keenan was killed in an auto accident. Peter T. Smith, A. Arthur Steele and Michael J. Scott took the lonely crowd to the reborning Fenwick Theater Company Cno longer a drama clubj-Smith and Steele were acting talent and Scott with a driving will to work. They helped with the rebirth. Gig Horton smiled at the electorate and was elected class president, while the baseball team almost made it to Omaha. And life went on as usual in Carlin and Alumni. The campus cops dropped another bout when it was learned that one of them liked to goof around. He usually ended up the goof. It's tough to go to Alumni Hall's third floor to punch in at the watchclock, find the lights off and every- thing quiet, and suddenly run into a bevy of flaming tennis balls. Richard J. Pedersen continued to study while other members of the intelligentsia-Cunninghams, McDermotts and Bourgeoises-decided Holy Cross just Wasn't making it in the Ivy League. Most lonely crowders studied 05 and on because it doesn't matter how good the criticism fells -the books had to be hit with fair regularity. But, for some and therefore for all, that was the year of questions. A nonsense sophomore newspaper The Streamer half-seriously asked some of the questions: What is our legacy? Does it include Vietnam? Racial prejudice? And the degenerate values of our society? If it does it's a damm good thing we are such foolhardy optimists. How can a young man be cynical? Must he first be stamped and marked by life before he too can wear his scars of bitter- ness It wasn't as bad as that. But the questions persisted in arising. Protests were lodged. We found out Holy Cross wasn't quite what they told us it was, one who lived through it recalled. That was the year the purple died. A propoganda filmstrip outlining the glories of purple banners floating on high was given a standing ovation in the Kimball movie palace and booed out of the joint. And St. Thomas Aquinas' Feast Day on March 7 that year went largely unnoted. PROGRESS WAS AFOOT junior year, if there was such a time, was a year of action. We moved to the top of the hill and started to be heard. For it's one of those Holy Cross norms that hands you much of your seniority during your junior year. The Prom.. The Crusader. The theater company. Cars. Later, the year- book and the Student Government. This must be the year of accomplishment, if there is one such year in four, the norm says. lt's because there were so many such developments that year, that the entire period resolved itself to nine months of hustle-bustle get-things-done. With no apparent pattern or logic. To try to impose a pattern on that year is to inject perfume and lace which didn't exist. So-without perfume or lace-these things happened in a year which began appropriately with Woke Up This Mornin' and which didn't see as much Singin' in the Sunshinen as it might have had not all the lights gone out one chilly autumn evening in the Great Blackout. The Revs. Robert J. Lindsay and john J. Walsh updated almost 2,000 years of Christianity in a couple of weeks. lf Vatican Il ever landed at Holy Cross, that was the time. Fr. Lindsay wheeled Christianity with Alka-Seltzer and came up with a chapel-full of Mass-goers each Sunday night. He was against sin and for charity and knew Why. Fr. Walsh did the same without the Alka-Seltzer. Jesuit scholastic Paul Quinlan was in on it, too, with a guitar with thought behind it. The spirit that grew out of the guitar aided in turning a musty Campion Hall room into something less that a nightclub but something more than a Kimball Hall movie. Tony Silva was chosen Prom chairman in a caucus which lasted until 4 a.m. He quickly Went into negotiations with Babtunde Olatunje but forgot to take a public relations man along. Nervous energy on the parts of Smith, Steele and Scott and others opened a sparkling, carpeted Fenwick Theater with a performance of Ring Round the Moon. And it looked like Holy Cross could be mildly entertaining if it wanted to be. Smith was to be elected president of the company. ?n A large measure of intramural talent names Tunney, O'Keefe, Massey, McElaney, Meehan, McCarthy and more hnally got together all on the same corridor and walked all over the Freshman Field and the fieldhouse. Football and basketball champions-by a long shot-and Tunney was most valuable player twice. Mel Massucco bowed onto Fitton Field considerably weaker than he would have liked to be. Jack Lentz was hobbling on crutches, not running around the end. Mike Cunnion had left school. And Kimener, Haley, Gorter and others couldn't do it alone, although they tried. Boston College won and there was one chance left to do what the lonely crowd was supposed to do before leaving. Lentz will be back. Kimener Was made captain for the occasion. It was the same sort of cast but a different plot for bas- ketball. Another new coach, Jack Donohue, was also weaker than he would have liked to be. Weaker by 7 feet and some inches which were making headlines in California where the UCLA freshmen team was beating the varsity team which was supposed to be the best in the country. So, when Holy Cross journeyed to St. John's, it was an easy case of five not being equal to five. But somehow the little five squeezed through, around, up and over the big five and the Redmen fell. Students massed behind the fieldhouse to give the team the kind of greeting which had gone out of style at Holy Cross. And Ron Texiera was going to be on the team the next year. Under the conditions, it was understandable that new WCHC station manager N. Thomas Osgood would stay awake for seventy-five hours to help boost spirits for the Boston College basketball game. Osgood stayed awake and stayed awake, playing These Boots Are Made for Walking an uncountable number of times. And spirits as of old ral- lied around the effort. Students contributed to a minor sports drive while Osgood stayed awake. Assistant Station Manager Roy Hoffman fed him coffee and slapped him on the face while Fred Kopacz and Larry Wilson took his pulse. But Boston College won. The bubble burst, perpetual sports observer J. Christopher Bill reported, but the im- portant thing was that the bubble had inflated at all. Newspaper magnate Bruce Clark was editor of the Cru- sader beginning second semester and during the time fished around for a way to make a philosophy journal into a news- paper. World news was tried and expansion was tried and, after a semester, a full-size newsprint page was tried. Some progress was made. Gene Sisco later in the year was named editor of the yearbook and promised he would break it in half to make it twice as good. John Sindoni was chosen Purple Key chairman and Kevin Condron was to head the 1843 Club. All these things happened to and were done by the lonely crowd because junior year is the year that is. This particular junior year was more so because of what had gone before. Constructive criticisms lodged the year before produced some major, if quiet, changes in Holy Cross life. Students were given some say in the discipline of their peers. john Power was drafted to draft a student life report because it was suddenly felt students might know about their lives. The Student Congress became a Student Government under a new constitution. With the change, the issues be- came quieter and a little more sophistocated than the price of donuts. But the issues remained. For the second time, students were allowed to write and publish criticisms of their teachers, although Mahogany Row questioned whether the right to know and the right to privacy might not be clashing. All these were changes in a Holy Cross which had started as a non-union seminary. And we were on the inside line. Other classes had seen changes in Holy Cross. Other classes had made changes in Holy Cross. But no class up to then had seen so many changes so fast. And if it seemed like a situation of hustle-bustle get-things-done it was. Guidelines and traditions had crumbled and been bull- dozed under. Progress was afoot. And it's one of the trade- marks of progress that it comes hustle-bustle doubletime. It's only later that men sit back to figure it out and con- struct new traditions to go along with the changes. There's progress to be made in the meantime. We came at a time when many traditions were gone and no new ones had stepped into the breach. If football rallies lost some spirit and wit, that was the name of the game. Because juniors now had cars and students were writing academic evaluations of their elders. The Prom came that spring and all the world was a stage --at least in the vicinity of The Meadows, The Northboro Rod and Gun Club and the fieldhouse. Olatunje and Martha and the Vandellas were late, but the lonely crowd broke almost even on the budget. Gerry Mulligan was elected Student Government presi- dent for the next year after spending three years in the varied ranks of a Bob Shields Congress, a Jim Murphy sideshow and a Tom Gallagher business organization. Chas. Domson, in a last-ditch show of parliamentary splendor, lost by a little and was allowed to see the ballots after considerable noise. Tom Kelly-the center fielder who once shrunk an op- position home run into a ground-rule double by losing the ball in a hole under the fence-was an all-American. In a year-end example of get-things-done energy, Anthony M. Pettolina shed his coat and tie and swam, waded and slogged across the oily Blackstone. When a Crusader photo- grapher's film broke the first time across, Pettolina got up at 8 o'clock the next morning and did it again-in time for a Crusader deadline. Some thought the newspaper play was a little magnanimous. But then, they never swam across the Blackstone. A trivia contest pitted the Crusader Humpties against the WCHC All Stars. The Humpties fell to an early 80-0 deficit behind a WCHC team which had as a fourth of its forces Fr. Lindsay. The All Stars knew Mae West's bust measurement and the Humpties knew the home states of the 1966 Miss America contest runner-up. The All Stars 1 N won when Fr. Lindsay knew the Latin languages dead sox rules. The security forces lost another round when a water fight erupted between Clark and Hanselman Halls on a balmy, spring evening. Water, the world's cheapest weapon, was used to great advantage on everybody including the cop. And, for some reason that year, there had been enough changes in Holy Cross that it felt like a college once in a while. Great numbers one weekend went to Lake Quinsiga- mond where crew teams were allegedly racing, and watching those races makes you thirsty. The spectators came back a little bit less thirsty to find a mixer going on the tennis courts behind the dormitories. And more thirst was quenched. And beer flowed and showed in the setting springtime sun. Not a Jesuit was to be seen. There were many changes in Holy Cross that year. Pro- gress was afoot. We were on the inside line. COMMITMENTS TO BE KEPT The mini-skirt was often pictured, often discussed and hard- ly ever seen in those times. So was LSD. So was Vietnam- bigger-than ever, although the change seemed great that Vietnam would soon be seen in all its power and lack of glory. These were some of the considerations when we moved into Superdorm and started running up astronomical tele- phone bills because New England Bell had been cagey enough to put a phone in every room. Most class members moved into the carpeted dormitory senior year. But the year was more like living on the tall, black iron fence at the foot of Linden Lane. Because, almost before you knew it, you had one foot on the outside. Under- srandably, it could be an uncomfortable experience- strad- dling that fence-but that's the way it was most of the year. On the outside of the fence was the world we'd always heard about. The world contained graduate schools and all the inherent evils such as applications, tests and interviews. There were medical and law schools. There was work. Vietnam was out there, and few there were who didn't have to take the most unpopular of American wars into serious consideration. The war had a Way of putting a crimp in almost every plan. The matrimony route lay open too. While the outside of the fence had begged a little con- sideration in earlier years, it demanded consideration that year. As witness the fact, recall the case of Michael A. Cunnion, 21, the kid who was throwing the ball sophomore year. Mike Cunnion was dead. He had left school after sopho- more year and joined the united States Marines. And gone to war. He was in a helicopter over Viet-Cong-infested territory in Quang Tri province, just below the Demilitar- ized Zone Operation Hastings-July 15. And he and twelve others died when the helicopter was shot down. The world demanded consideration. Albert D. Hop Riopel died that year too, at age 65. But there was a difference in his case. Hop Riopel had played many games, had played to win. And he had won -plenty. Our game, however, was not over yet. There was still a world this side of the fence. We still had at least one foot in the game, and there were nine months left to play. There were commitments to be kept. A newspaper had to be printed for another semester- twice a week-and a radio station had to keep transmitting, although New England Bell had botched up the wires while installing the telephones. A Student Government had work to do. Although the issues weren't as stirring as chocolate- covered donuts and retroactive failures, it was necessary to keep Gallagher's constitution in working order. A year- book had to be produced. These were by and large commitments previously made and now being played out. Richard Pedersen was the school's first Fenwick scholar and became the school's second Rhodes scholar. Because of commitments previously made. His were made freshman year when he started rolling up those 4.05. Old commitments, but ones which had to be made good on. Perhaps the most universal of commitments was to ulti- mate truth in philosophy class. The truth learned was that one senior, given a fair amount of tolerance and a little bit of luck at playing the angles, can usually make it through-just barely. Beyond that, little of the truth can be entered into the record. Another commitment was kept in Chestnut Hill, Massa- chusetts. Jack Lentz was back in the game. Kimener was there. Haley was there, and so were Gorter and Kelly. It was the lonely crowd's turn to see what could be done in the annual go-around and the odds were against the lonely crowd. Lentz threw and Kirnener was there. Lentz threw and Haley was there. Lentz ran. And Boston College was on top 26-25 and stalling. Then Lent: threw again. And Kimener was there-39 yards away. The lonely crowd fulfilled a commitment. Which it wasn't supposed to do. Jack Lentz had been out for a full season but he batted a thousand on the O'Melia award while he was in. And 6-3-1 was a magic sequence and the best in our four-year-memory. For a day and a night and another day, a basketball game was waged in the fieldhouse in support of the minor sports drive. Marathons seemed to be in style and these guys had all the moves. They bobbed. They weaved. They stumbled. They limped. And a 28-hour national record was set for basketball marathons. Howling winds came bearing snow. The winds scraped over the rolling hills and down onto Worcester and on. The snow fell and was whipped by the wind into rhythmic, streamlined drifts. And seniors had to go to Breen's and elsewhere to keep warm. The spring crept in and winds became breezes of warm friendliness. Snow melted and the earth drank revival. Trees donned jackets of deep, cool green. Temperatures rose. And seniors had to go to Breen's and elsewhere to keep cool. The commitments were played out like a ball of string- going faster and faster toward the end. Pugilists did their stuff at a Yellow Barn happening. One-hundred Days. Ninety-nine, ninety-eight, ninety-seven . . . and our time was up. Commencement is not a beginning. It is an end. On the other side of a tall, black iron fence exist demands. De- mands capable of making four years on the inside look like slow times, simple times, the best of times. Which they probably were. When Mike Cunnion was throwing the ball and all-nighters were being pulled and the lonely crowd and Holy Cross College spent nine months of each of four consecutive years together. When the times were played out, however, the lonely crowd moved on. l '43 A QV, CHARLES ANDREW ADAMS ANDREW A. ALESS1, JR. A.B. Englifb 79 Fountain Street Norwich, Conn. ROGER MICHAEL ANASTASIO A.B. Biology 51 Austen Rd. Hamden, Conn. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society, K of C, Senior Brother Program A.B. Clafrics 130 Hyde Park Avenue Jamaica Plain, Mass. Cmmder, Sports Editor, WCHC, Sports Director, Eta Sigma Phi, Secretary, IRC. JOHN H. ANDERSON A.B. Hiflory H 012011 85 Chester St. Hamden, Conn. Dean'S List, 2, 3, Delta Epsilon Sigma, Phi Alpha Theta, Senior Brother Program, Young Repub- licans, St. Thomas More Society, Resident Assistant. 154 RALPH MATTHEW AMENDOLA B.S. Pbyficy 170 Circular Avenue Hamden, Conn. Physics Society, Wrestling, Sen- ior Brother Program T ERENCE M. ANDREWS A.B. German 10 Meadowbrook Center Summit, NJ. Student Senate, Arnold Air So- ciety, WCHC. Wx RICHARD J. ANTONIUC A.B. Sociology 49 Cornish Street East Weymouth, Massachusetts ROBERT S. APITO A.B. Sociology 53 Reservoir Road Belleville, New Jersey JOHN C. ARENA A.B. Mczzfhemoticr 6 Lakeview Ave. New Britain, Conn. Glee Club, Manager, Paks, Sen- ior Brother Programg Bridge Club, Intercollegiate Chorale. JOHN EDWIN ARPE JR. WALTER J. Avis, JR. JOHN P. BACHINI B.S. Economics A.B. Engliib B.S. Accounting 125-20 Stephen Place 6 Dolan St. 516 River St. Elm Grove, Wis. Worcester, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Student Senate, Economics Club, Sophomore Class Vice President, Merrimack Valley Club, Treas- Executive Board, Senior Brother Worcester Club, President, Var- urer, Varsity Football. Program sity Baseball, Varsity Basketball. DOMINIC JOHN BALESTRA A.B. Pre-Medical 3321 Clay St. Wheaton, Md. Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Alpha Epsi- lon Delta, Biology Society, Ar- nold Air Society, AFROTC Drill Team, AFROTC. ALBERT FRANCIS BARBER, JR. A.B. Economicr 44 Lynden Street Rye, N.Y. Junior Class Vice President 7 Class Council, Junior Prom Com- mittee, A.E.C., Parents' Week- end Committee, Freshman Base- ball. NIAQT' is y -if JOHN JOSEPH ZAPPIA A.B. Philosophy 135 Clinton Portland, Maine Purpleg Gallagher Film Series, Student Senate, WCHC, Biology Society. CHARLES R. BAUMANN B.S. Chemiylfy 30 Oak Knoll Belleville, Illinois Crzmzderg Cross and Crucible St. John Berchmans Society Deutsche Ubersetzungsbund Cross Country. 156 LEE JOSEPH BAROLO A.B. Psychology 121 Plandome Center Manhasset, LI., N.Y. Crew Team, Crzmzcieq' WCHC, Physics Society. LEE F. BARTLETT III A.B. French 16 Calumet Ave. Worcester, Mass. Sodality, French Club, President JOHN J. BENTLEY, JR. B.S. Cbemiytry Embassy B8cF JOHN BERRY III APO 223 A.B. Englirh New York, N.Y. Marne Rd. Cross and Crucible, Young Re- Hopatcong, N.J. publicaans' Club, Cmmderg Deut- Dean's List, 2, 3, St. Thomas sche Ubersetzungsbund. More Society, Purple, Editor WILLIAM T. BAUMANN AB. Englifb 1207 Hayward Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio 1843 Club, Trustree, Student Government, Vice President, I.R.C., Business Club, St. Thomas More Society, Rugby, Senior Brother Program, Junior Prom Committee, Winter Weekend Committee, Purple Pazfcberg Yachting Club. EDWARD ROBERT BIGLIN JACK R. BEVIVINO GEORGE E. BETTINGER, JR. AB. Englirb Honors B.S. Biology B.S. Biology 9519 Edgely Rd. 7 Fales Road 218 11th Ave. Bethesda, Md. Dedham, Massachusetts Belmar, N.J. Dean's List. 3, Student Senate, Crew, Biology Society, Senior Biology Society, K of C, Lecfuf- A.E.C., Graduate Studies Com- Brother Program erg Yacht Club, mittee 157 J. CHRISTOPHER BILL B.S. Psychology 289 Main St. So. Deerfield, Mass. Purple Patcber, Sports Editor, Crzrmder, Sports Editor, Bridge RAYMOND M. BLAKE, JR. Club, Senior Brother Program, B.S.Ecoriomicr-Accozirztirzg Biology Society, Freshman La- 21 Kahler, Ave. Crosse MllfOH, Mass. S1 v-'at' 2 X -Q 49' ,J THoMAs MATTHEW BLAKE AB. Economic: Honorr 16 Wellington Rd. Garden City, N.Y. Dean's List, 3, Senior Brother Program, Emerald Shield, Ar- nold Air Society, AFROTC, Economics Club, Junior Prom Committee, Winter Weekend Committee, Cross Country, Track. V9 JOHN J. BowEs, JR. WILLIAM J. BLUM FRANCIS J. BLANCHFIELD AB. Erigliib B.S. Accoimfing A.B. Political Science 380 Union Ave. 159 Beach 133rd St. 450 Overbrook Road Framingham, Mass. Belle Harbor, N.Y. Ridgewood, N.J. St. Thomas More Society, Cricm- Dean's List, 2, 3, 1843 Club, Resident Assistant, Purple Key, der, Homecoming Committee, Trustee, Purple Key, Purple Junior Prom Committee, Student Junior Prom Committee. Pazcber, Business Manager, Al- Senate, Sodality, Senior Brother pha Sigma Nu, Freshman Foot- Program, Homecoming Commit- ball, Resident Assistant tee, Crusader. 158 ALFRED MICHAEL BONGIORNO A.B. Pre-Medical 86-104 Marengo St. Holliswood, N.Y. Glee Clubg Biology Societyg Purple Patcberg Senior Brother Programg Homecoming Commit- teeg Yacht Club MAXIMILIAN BRENNINKMEYER A.B. Economic: 22 Larchmont Ave. Larchmont, N.Y. Dean's List, 1. 'wks ROBERT F. BoTT A.B. Hiffory 4 Bursley Place White Plains, New York Dean's List, 3g B.j.F. Debating Society, Presidentg Alpha Sigma Nug Crzuaden' Trident Societyg Resident Assistantg Crow Cm'- rentfg Winter Weekend Corn- mittee. ROBERT CARL BRADBURY B.S. Biology Luce Road Williamstown, Mass. Senior Class Secretaryg Biology Societyg K of Cg Homecoming Committeeg junior Prom Com- mitteeg Senior Brother Program. JOHN E. BRANN RICHARD I BRANDT A.B. Englifb A.B Pbzlofopby 51 Main Street 419 East Pennsylvania Blvd Slattersville, Rhode Island Woodbtrry New jersey 159 JAMES A. BRETT AB, Hiyfgyy JAMES A. BRIDENSTINE 21 Horne Sfreer AB. Hiflofy Methuen, Mags, 18224 Bi1'Cl'1ICSt DI. Honorary Freshman Class Presi- Detroit, Michigan dentg Junior Class Treasurerg Crumciefg' St. Thomas More So- Senior Brother Programg Purple cietyg Vestryg Sodalityg History Keyg Merrimack Valley Club, Academyg Senior Brother Pro- Secretaryg Student Judicial Board gram gif' n-vW P 6' ROBERT F. BURDA AB. Mod. Lamgzmgef JOHN L BROUILLARD 122 Third AVCIIUC AB. Mathematics Pelham, N-Y- 19 MCBfide Street WCHC5 Junior Year Abroad Northbridge, Mass. Senior Brother Program 160 ROELAND BRENNINKMEYER A.B. Economics 22 Larchmont Ave. Larchmont, N.Y. Cross and Scroll, Chairmang Soc- cer, Captain JEROME J. BURKE A.B. Pre-Medical Box 206 Grayslake, I11. 7' JOHN F. BURKE A.B. Mathemazicf 61 Tower St. Worcester, Mass. Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball. MICHAEL PAUL BYRNE A.B. Pre-Medical 2753 Wwdbine Evanston, Illinois Dean's List 3, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Psi Chi, Senior Brother Program, Chicagoland Club, Treasurer, Homecoming Com- mittee, Yacht Club, Rugby if DONALD W. BUSSMAN A.B. Pre-Medical 4 Wfood Acre Road St. Louis, Missouri GERALD JAMES BUTLER A.B. Mizzfhemizricf 825 Sunset Street Scranton, Pa. Dearfs List 1, 2, St. Thomas More Society, President, I.R.C., Secretary, Sodality, Senior Broth- er Program, Cmmclerg Junior Prom Committee, Christian En- counter A.B. Sociology 107 Standish Rd. Milton, Mass. Sociology Club, Hockey 161 MATTHEW PAUL BYRNE WILLIAM F. X. BYRNE, JR. A.B. Political Science 1 Butler Road Westbury, N.Y. Business Club, Vice President, Glee Club, Paks, I.R.C., Met Club, Trustee PAUL A. CALLAGHAN A.B. Classics JOHN M. CADLEY ROBERT F. CAHILL 72 Porterfield Place A.B. English B.S. Economic!-Accounting Freeport, N.Y 160 Stevens Ave. 8 Shawmut Street Dean's List, 2, Senior Brother West Hempstead, N.Y. Worcester, Massachusetts Program RICHARD R. CARADONNA CHARLES P. CANGEMI A.B. Biology A.B. Economics 118 Eastern Avenue 83 Bentley Avenue Worcester, Mass. Jersey City, NJ. Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Business Club, Senior Brother Delta, Senior Brother Program Program, Economics Club, Yacht Club, Varsity Golf 152 JAMES JOSEPH CALLAHAN A.B. History 311 Lexington Street Newton, Mass. Dean's List 3, Student Senate, Dorm Council, Class Council, Young Democrats, I.R.C., Secre- tary, junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Committee, Cru- .mcierg Purple Parcberg Boston Club, Trustee, Freshman La- crosse fi v ?' VICTOR L. CARPINIELLO A.B. Biology 113 Crotona Avenue Harrison, N.Y. Alpha Epsilon Delta, K of C, Biology Club, Senior-Brother Program, Freshman Lacrosse JOSEPH RALPH CARUSONE AB. Evzglirh-Cllzrricr 1 Empire Avenue Glens Falls, N.Y. Deans List 2, 3, Junior Year Abroad, Senior Brother Program, Fencing Team, Manager, Glens Falls Club JW' ROBERT JAMES CHEEVER, JR. AB. Economicr 86 Whipple Street So. Weymouth, Mass. NROTC, Battalion Commander, Navy Drill Team, Junior Prom Committee, Winter Weekend Committee, Trident Society, Board of Governors MICHAEL R. CHAMBERLAIN B.S. Sociology 251 Asharoken Beach Northport, N.Y. Freshman Class Treasurer, Jun- ior Year Abroad, Lacrosse, I.R.C. 163 JAMES E. CASEY AB. Sociology 176 Seeley St. Brooklyn, N.Y. Class Council, Crzlmclen Purple Porcberg Sociology Club, Co- Chairman, Purple Key, Junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Committee, Resident Assistant RICHARD JAMES CASTRIOITA A.B. Pre-Medical 19 Fairmount Street Woburn, Mass. Class Council, Eta Sigma Phi, K of C, Sodality, Biology Club' Crew 7 J. DANIEL CHRISTIAN A.B. Economics 1349 Bunce Road Frewsburg, N.Y. Senior Brother Program 51 , 'f-f'-te-,. e f , 1 X w, tt' 4 I Q 'if , Q ., , ' ,, . ,I '. Q I I ,U aft ' K 'I 7 v, We xx W , as -he x , Q 'MV' a KEVIN P. CONDRON A.B. Political Science 1601 N. Washington Ave. Scranton, Pa. 1843 Club, Trustee, President, Senior Brother Program, junior Prom Committee, Emerald Shield Society, St. Thomas More Socie- ty, Young Democrats, Student Government, Social Chairman BRUCE E. CLARK A.B. History I-lotion 405 East 51st St. New York, N.Y. Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Ciaiacler, Editor-in-Chief, Freshman Orien- tation, Chairman, Hanify Lec- ture, Chairman, l.R.C., President, Junior Prom Committee, Parents' Weekend Committee Chairman, Parple Patcbeig' Purple Key, The Page, Editor, Cross and Scroll, Alpha Sigma Nu, Delta Epsilon Sigma, Phi Alpha Theta, Vice- President f A HAROLD G. CLARKE A.B. Sociology 265 Court Rd. Winthrop, Mass. Yacht Club, Commodore, K of C, Recorder, Biology Society, PAUL THOMAS COLLURA BS. Biology 6 Glenvue Drive N. Carmel, N.Y. Dean's List 2, 3, Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Senior Brother Program, Crew 164 Sociology Club MATTHEW JOSEPH COFFEY A.B. Political Science 13 Wendell Street Plainview, N.Y. Cifaracleig' K of C, Homecoming Committee, Young Democrats Club, Winter Weekend Com- mittee, NROTC, Trident Society GEORGE WALTER CONK AB. Plailoropby 33 Riviera Drive East Massapequa, N.Y. A.E.C., Crmaderg Senior Brother Program, Fenwick Theatre Com- pany, Orientation Committee, Freshman Cross Country, Chris- tian Encounter, Chairman. LAWRENCE PHILIP CORBET1' A.B. Biology 16 Pickwick Terrace Rockville Centre, N.Y. Sodality, Vice President, Varsity Golf, Co-Captain, Resident As- sistant 'RS if KEVIN M. CONNELL A.B. Englifb 72-24 Juno Street Forest Hille, N.Y. I.R.C., Vestry, WCHC, john Colet Society, Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, C.C.D. .Qt MICHAEL CoRNELIUs CoNNoR AB. Economicr 3795 Richmond Avenue Staten Island, N.Y. Senior Brother Program, NRO- TC, Trident Society, Semper Fidelis Society, Winter Week- end Comrnittee, Economics Club, Lacrosse wr' Q DAVID J. COPPE BS. Biology 135 Robindale Dr. New Britain, Conn. Glee Club, Board of Directors, Manager, Paks, Varsity Quartet 3 EDWARD M. COONEY A.B. Hirtory 173 Berker St. Hartford, Conn. Dean's List 3, I.R.C., Crzfmcierf Senior Class Treasurer, Junior Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Prom Committee, St. Thomas Delta, Orientation Committee More Society, Varsity Baseball, Manager ROBERT M. COX, JR. THOMAS J. COX, JR. B.S. Eco1zomicr-Accozmting AB. History ll Sylvan Avenue 14 Highland St. W. Newton, Mass. Woburn, Mass. Dean's List 3, St. Thomas More Senior Brother Program, History Society, Economics Club, Senior Academy, Homecoming Com- D Brother Program, Junior Prom mittee, I.R.C., Fenwick Theatre . ,t. : ?'m'l Committee Company, Lacrosse W-FTS' JOHN WILLIAM CRADDOCK AB. Sociology 2145 Chestnut Avenue Wilmette, Ill. Junior Prom Committee, Winter Weekend Committee, Chairman, Fenwick Theatre Company, AF ROTC. F-BF .f fi. PAUL EDWARD COURCHAINE A.B. Hiftory 3 Raleigh Worcester, Mass. Student Senate, WCHC, Public- ity Director, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Homecoming Commit- tee, History Academy, Phi Alpha Theta HOWARD CURLET1' AB. Economic! 5605 Earlham St. Pltisiladelphia, Pa. Deutsche Ubersetzungsbund, Junior Year Abroad HENRY LEONARD CYR, JR. AB. Engzzfb 18 Driftway St. Hopedale, Mass. AF ROTC 166 l ROBERT S. CZACHOR A.B. Hirlory 42 Pleasant Street Forge Village, Mass. WILLIAM A. DEBASSIO A.B. Biology 67 Gilbert Street Marshfield, Mass. Biology Society, WCHC, Purple Patclaer, Senior Brother Program LAWRENCE PAUL DAMIAN A.B. Pbilofopby 697 Dick Road Cheektowaga, N.Y. Dean's List 2, WCHCQ CCD, Executive Board, Purple Patcber, Senior Brother Program f 32 PAUL L. DAVOREN A.B. Pre-Medical l69 Congress Street Milford, Mass. WCHC, Gallagher Film Series Co-Chairman, Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, Horne- coming Committee JAMES F. DELEHAUNTY LEANDRO V. DELGADO A.B. Sociology A.B. Hirtory 20 Elmwood Terrace 4006 Benjamin Cresskill, NJ. Royal Oak, Michigan I-Iomeceoming Committee, NR- AFROTC, AFROTC Drill Team, OTC, Trident Society, Board of Arnold Air Society, Crew Governors, Freshman Baseball LAWRENCE C. DEMPSEY BS. Biology 6676 North Sioux Avenue Chicago, Illinois JOHN XAVIER DENNEY, JR. A.B. Economic! 1814 Maple Street Wilmington, Delaware AFROTC, Arnold Air Society, B.J.F. Debating Society, Econom- ics Club, WCHC, St. Thomas More Society, Student Senate, Junior Prom Committee, Cm- mcier, Senior Brother Program Committee, Resident Assistant STANLEY J. DEPTULA AB. Economic! 228 Sherwood Avenue Syracuse, N.Y. Deanls List 3, Bowling League er Program .Mwliix f , nge, x 5 vi. ,I .. .r i. ' raw- 1 3 X i. .,. +..,,,?, CHARLES JOHN D1CEcco A.B. Pre-Medical 404 Courtly Circle Rochester, N.Y. Biology Society, Bowling League MICHAEL C. DESMOND A.B. Hirtory 304 Woodward Avenue Buffalo, N .Y. Young Democrats Secretary, SALVATORE J. DIBERNARDO L Englijb Sf. ThOID3.S MOIC SO- l5 Olds Place GCW5 Rugby Hartford, Conn. Dean's List 2, 5, St. Thomas More Society, Emerald Shield Society, Senior Brother Program, Graduate Studies Committee Treasurer, Sodality, Senior Broth- X if Q EDWARD W. D1cK A.B. Pre-Medical 232 Huron Avenue Sheboygan, Wisconsin Student Senate, Dorm Council, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Homecom- ing Committee, junior Prom Committee FRANK C. DILEGO B.S. Cbemirtry 54 Elmwood Ave. North Adams, Mass Cross and Crucible w-ai? CHARLES A. DoMsoN A.B. Hirlory Honor: 127 East Center St. Mahoney City, Pa. Dean's List, 1, 2, History Acad- emy, President, Vestry, Warden, St. Thomas More Society, Sodal- ity, Student Senate, Student Congress, Representative of the Year, Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairman, Alpha Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha Theta, Secretary-Trea- surer, Young Republicansi, Fen- wick Theatre Society, Red Cross Blood Drive, Chairman, Boxing JOHN J. DOLAN B.S. Economicr-Accounting 223 Monticello St. Jersey City, NJ. Freshman Baseball, Varsity Base- ball, Senior Brother Program 169 EDWARD JOHN DIMON, JR. A.B. Hirlory Knickerbocker Rd. Roebling, NJ. St. Thomas More Society, I.R.C. Ski Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Yacht Club, Varsity Foot ball, Lacrosse, Co-Captain fLZf11Q?w JOSEPH S. DIRR AB. Matbemalicr 403 Westchester Ave. Yonkers, N.Y. Dean's List 2, 3, WCHC. GEORGE R. DONAHUE, JR. A.B. Evzglirb 3415 Park Hill Place Fairfax, Va. WCHC, Crzmzderg Fenwick The- atre Company, AFROTC, Fenc- ing Y 3 KEVIN M. DOYLE A.B. Englifb 23 Chester St. Arlington, Mass. NROTC, Trident Society, Board of Governors, Semper Fidelis Society, President, Winter Week- end, Executive Committee, Sen- ior Brother Program, WCHC, Homecoming Committee, Young Democrats, Crow Czzwentf, Ad- vertising Editor WILLIAM DOWNEY A.B. Accozmring 80 Roxbury Rd. So. Franklin Square, N.Y. Marching Band, Dance Band, Bridge Club, Economics Club 170 WILLIAM H. DONNELLY A.B. Sociology 554 Pleasant St. Worcester, Mass. Business Club, Class Council Lacrosse, Co-Captain PHILIP DANIEL DOWNEY A.B. Sociology 239 Huron Ave. Cambridge, Mass. Senior Brother Program, Semper Fideleis Society, Vice President BERNARD J DOUGHERTY A.B Englzfb 24 Oaklyn Lane Matawan NJ AFROTC, Crew 4 PAUL M. DOYLE AB. Hifzfory 29 Henshaw St. Brighton, Mass. Cfumclerg Purple Patcberg Senior Brother Program, Homecoming V 1 Committee, St. Thomas More So- JOHTI 152 JR' EDWLIAZD iigjfi'-QESNE fiery? u lgmof Pfam Ccomlmeei 5331 Kenmore Rd. 35 Buick sf. 'R'C Crosse' O' aptam Shaker Heights, Ohio Springfield, Mass. Emerald Shield, Chancellor, Var- Sodality, Glee Club, Junior Year sity Football, Manager, Senior Abroad, Cmmder, Features Edi- Brother Program, Cross and tor WILLIAM THOMAS EARLS, JR. A.B. Economics Delaware Ridge Lane Cincinnati, Ohio Senior Class President, 1843 Club, Trustee, Treasurer, junior Prom, Co-Chairman, Wi n t e r Weekend Committee, Senior Brother Program, Business Club, Economics Club, Class Council, Purple Patcberg Student judicial Board, Tennis, St. Thomas More Society Scroll Society, B.J.F. Debating Society, Orientation Committee, Resident Assistant JAMES ANTHONY DYER BRYAN J. DU LANEY B.S. Biology AB. Economic! 474 Milton Rd. 136 Vreeland Ave. Rye, N.Y. Bergenfield, NJ. Biology Society, Senior Brother Student Senate, Dorm Council Program, junior Prom Commit- WCHC, Glee Club, Paks, Inter tee, Resident Assistant collegiate Chorale, Economics Club, Orientation Committee GEORGE F. EMMoNs JOSEPH J. ELIA, JR. AB. Hiszory AB. English 279 North Ridge Street 88 Tower St. Portchester, N.Y. Methuen, Mass. Dearfs List, 2g WCHCg St. Deans List, 2 Thomas More Society l RICHARD EGAN AB. History if 51 Oxford Rd. Num Longmeadow, Mass. JAMES V. FALLON BS. Physics PETER J. EsPos1To 53 Collins Ave. AB. Economics SZIYVU16, N.Y. 7 Walker Ave. Varsity Track Rye, NY' NICHOLAS R. FALZONE C1'zzs4zrier,' I.R.C.g Young Repub- AB- Hmiory licansg Economics Clubg Senior 8149 Jeffery Blvd. Brother Program Chicago, IH' Cross and Scroll, Vice-Chairmang St. Thomas More Societyg Senior 172 Brother Programg Biology Society ,Ya , , , S' MDMMCW iw erm , wx . Sag' JULIEN MICHAEL FARLAND AB. Philosophy Maple St. Mendon, Mass. Senior Brother Program, junior FRANCIS J. FAULKNER Prom Committee AB' Himwy 42 Main St. Norfolk, Mass. Conservative Club, Secretary, Young Republicans, Senior Bro- ther Program, WCHC, Hockey, Wrestling, Manager P PR GEORGE C. FINLEY A.B. Biology 36 Lakeview Dr. West Hartford, Conn. Biology Society, Class Council Rugby Club, Senior Brother Proi gram, Business Club y S? ii. ROBERT JOSEPH FISSMER THOMAS C. FITZPATRICK DANIEL E. FLORYAN A.B. Claemirtry AB. Political Science A.B. Cbemiftry 23 Cameo Road 911 North Adams Rd. 71 Penn Drive Claymont, Delaware Birmingham, Mich. West Hartford, Conn. Cross and Crucible, President, Deans List, 1, Sophomore Class Fencing Team, Co-Captain, Cross K of C3 WCHC3 Varsity Crew? President, Student Senate, Class and Crucible, Vice-President German Club, Young Democrats Couneilg Purple Key, Crew ROBERT L. FLYNN A.B. Ezzglifb 1 Sunny Brook Road Bronxville, N.Y. Fenwick Theatre Company, jun- ior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Program GREGoRY C. FREEMAN A.B. Sociology 69 Storey Lane Yonkers, N.Y. Societey X- 5, ,,A-A-rr-+- - .TNR--'J .- ' W' ZH li is 1651, -r','. V. 2 iwijfki Q. RICHARD E. FRANKEL BS. Sociology 7847 No. Kildare St. Skokie, Ill. Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball 174 THOMAS J. FLYNN A.B. Histor, Hofzorf 2368 Fast Main St. Bridgeport, Conn. Dean's List, 1, 2, 5, Crzmztfer: 1.R.C., President, Cross and Scroll -QAM MICHAEL GERARD FOLEY AB. Philofopby 131 Vernon St. Wforcester, Mass. Dean's List, 2, 3, Alpha Sigma Nu, Purple Key, Sodality, Day Student President, Freshman Baseball, Worcester Club, Pa- rents Weekend Committee JOHN FORASTB A.B. P.tj'cboZogy 10 Tunstall Road Scarsdale, N.Y. Sodality, Band, Dance Band, Crosstones, Student Leader, Resi- dent Assistant, Christian Action, Coodinator we : .. - WILLIAM P. FRIESE AB. Economics 1953 N. 6th St. Sheboygan, Wisconsin Sodality, Economics Club, K of C, Class Council, Winter Week- end Committee, Senior Brother Program, Semper Fidelis Society, Trident Society, NROTC, Fresh- man Golf EDWARD J. FRUIN AB. Cbemirtry 1024 Lydia Drive Franklin Square, N.Y. Croft and Crucible, Publication Editor, Glee Club, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Pro- gram, K of C JOHN P. GALLIGAN, JR. AB. Prycbology 192 Cleveland Drive Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y. WCHC, K of C, Senior Brother Program, Junior Prom Commit- tee, Biology Society 'K ACN MICHAEL PATRICK GARVEY J. CARLTON GARTNER, JR. RICHARD P- GARCIA BS. Political Science AB. Pre-Meclicczl Hoizom' AB' ECOWOWWCJ 133 May St. 1845 Deveron Road 15 Bryant Crescent Worcester, Mass. Baltimore, Maryland White Plains, N-Y. NROTC, Trident Society, Win- Dean's List, l, 2, 3, Sodality, ter Weekend Committee, Rugby President, Biology Society, Alpha TICPISUICI, ViCf1 PICS-iderlf Epsilon Delta, Delta Epsilon Sig- ma, Alpha Sigma Nu 175 EUGENE F. GAUGHAN AB. History 376 Twentieth Avenue Paterson, NJ. K of C, Senior Brother Program, St. Thomas More Society, junior Prom Comrnitteeg AFROTC WALTER F. GEORGE A.B. Biology 35 Sunset Drive Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y. Dean's List, 2, 3, Wrestling, Co- Captain, Biology joiirmzl, Cir- culation Managerg Soclality, Sen- ior Brother Program, Alpha Ep- silon Delta, K of C, Junior Prom Committee, Biology S o c i e t yg Yacht Club, Cross and Crucible f 'Q l , Ann 1659 ALBERT FRANK GIALLORENZI B.S. Biology 297 Cedar Street South Hempstead, N.Y. Dean's List, 3, Track, Biology Society, Senior Brother Program JOHN F. GLARNER THOMAS J. GILLIGAN PAUL F. GILL B.S. Eiiglifb BS. Cbemirtry AB. Hirtory 2058 jefferson St. 9 Lake Avenue 33 Brookway Drive St. Paul, Minn. Great Barrington, Mass. Shrewsbury, Mass. NROTC 176 JOHN G. GLENNON A.B. Political Science 25 Prospect Street South Dartmouth, Mass. Cmmder, Yacht Club, James Madison Society, Vice-President, C , C1 b S Q THOMAS P. GLYNN CHARLES EDWARD GOBRON Onsefvatwe i u A ecretary' A.B. Pre-Medical A.B. Psychology Young Relmbhcarrs Treasurer 3635 Hamilton-Cleves Road 5 Summer Lane Hamilton, Ohio Framingham, Mass. Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Sodality, Fenwick Theatre Com- Delta, Senior Brother Program, pany, Psi Chi, Treasurer, Eta Crew Sigma Phi, Lacrosse, Manager, Vestry . JOHN GORTER A.B. Hirlory 40 Plymouth Rd. East Providence, R.I. NROTC, Trident Society, Sem- per Fidelis Society, Varsity La- crosse, Varsity Football JOHN M ARTIN GOGUEN A.B. Mathematics 5 Dorrance St. Worcester, Mass. 177 V , ' . figs Y, Q HQ, , r r -if . FRANK J. GODEK A.B. Riirricm 19 Prospect Street Hatfield, Mass. C.C.D., Secretary, Senior Brother Program, Math Club, Soccer STUART EDWARD GRAHAM A.B. Economics 1830 Wyoming Avenue Forty Fort, Pa. Economics Club, Business Club Crusader if ROBERT J. GROYA A.B. Classics Pre-Medical Honors 8948 Menard Avenue Morton Grove, Illinois Biology Society 3 DAVID PETER GRANEY A.B. Sociology 58 Ellicott Avenue Batavia, N.Y. Glee Club, Sodality, Senior Brother Program, Sociology Club, Co-Chairman mmm, KENNETH D. GRAHAM A.B. Economics 1325 Pleasant Street Juan- Worcester, Mass. Dean's List, 3, Economics Club . IQ gram, C.C.D. JOHN C. GREEN A.B. Pre-Medical 2901 Avenue J Brooklyn, N.Y. K of C, Criisizcierg Glee Club, Biology Society, Junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Com- mittee, Senior Brother Program Criisczderg Physics Society, Crew EDWARD S. GRYGIEL A.B. Physics 175 Fairview Ave. Coventry, R.I. 178 9 Treasurer, Senior Brother Pro- THOMAS HALEY A.B. Sociology 28 Aberdeen Road Hingham, Mass. Purple Key, Senior Brother Program, Resident Assistant, AFROTC, Arnold Air Society, Dorm Council, Class Council, Varsity Football MICHAEL J. HART A.B. Pre-Medical Honorr 126 Ward Avenue Staten Island, N.Y. Dean's List l, 3, CADG, Co- Chairman, Prom Prelude, Co- Chairman, junior Prom, Co- Chairman, Executive Assistant to the Student Government, Pa- rentls Weekend, Co-Chairman, Purple Palcber, Managing Edi- tor, Purple Key, Secretary, Bio- logy lozmzal, Co-Editor, K of C, Senior Brother Program, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Alpha Sigma Nu, Delta Epsilon Sigma 3 vt., ,T -M M - y, .,.7 ffe-:Er A-,L . f , 4-, r ' 'ul' ' JAMES P. HANLAN A.B. Hlriofy 539 Westford St. Lowell, Mass. DANIEL MICHAEL HARRIGAN AB. Pre-Mecliml 221-37 llflth Ave. Cambria Heights, N .Y. Glee Club, Board of Directors, Intercollegiate Chorale, Paks, Student Leader, Choir, Purple Pofcher, Senior Editor, Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, Junior Prom Committee WILLIAM W. HAYS RICHARD J. HEALY A.B. I-Iirzory A.B. Sociology 50 Wfestwood Road 3 Grove Street Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Lynniield, Mass. St. Thomas More Society, Sociol- ogy Club, Track, Senior Brother Program BRUCE RAYMOND HEATON BS. Ecoiiomicf 27 Perry Street Auburn, Mass. Economics Club A1 CHARLES R. HINCKLE A.B. English 128 Charles Drive Havertown, Penn. RICHARD Leo HEHIR A.B. Biology 19 Shattuck Street Worcester, Mass. Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta JAMES K. HIGGINS A.B. History I-Ioiiom 4327 Carpenter Ave. New York, N.Y. Varsity Football, Business Club, Dean's List, 1, 2, 5, Phi Alpha CCD, Senior-Brother Program Theta, Delta Epsilon Sigma, 180 JOHN T HICKEY A.B. Clarxicx 25 Murray Street Augusta Maine 9 ROY A. HOFFMAN A.B. Hirlofy 1801 John F. Kennedy Blvd. Philadelphia, Pa. PHILIP M. HOWE A,B. Hirtory 159 Crosby Street Arlington, Mass. Dean's List, 3, Vestry, Class Council, Y O u n g Democrats, Hockey, Crumcierg Lacrosse, St. Thomas More Society, Parents' Weekend Committee, Olympics Committee THOMAS F. HOGAN AB. Hirtorry 26 Prescott Street Torrington, Conn. Class Council, St. Thomas More MICHAEL GEORGE HORAN Society, Secretary, I.R.C., Ap- AB. Hirfory pointments Secretary, Senior- 80 Mulberry Street Brother Program, Committee Worcester, Mass. Chairman, junior Prom Com- Glee Club, History Academy, mittee Senior Brother Program ROBERT 1. HOWARD A.B. Biology 8 Charles Street Batavia, N.Y. Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, K of C, WCHC, Homecoming Committee, junior Prom Committee ' ' ' ' ' Q SJNSQZM , . . GEORGE B. HORTON A.B. Economic! Honors 100 Plunkett St. Pittsfield, Mass. Deans List, 1, 2, 5, Purple Key, Alpha Sigma Nu, junior Class President, Resident Assistant, Student Senate DAVID HUDAK A.B. Biology 40 Olney Rd. Wethersheld, Conn. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society lm DONALD E. HUFF A.B. Polilicczl Science Langsford Road Cape Porpoise, Maine WCHCQ NROTCg Trident So- ciety, Senior Brother Program Crow Czmfenlf, CO-Editor 9 fl an J New twan- FRANK IACOBELLIS A.B. Pre-Medical 219 Jackson Ave. Pelham Manor, N.Y. Dean's List, 2, 35 K of C, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Freshman Foot- ball, Freshman Lacrosse, Biology Society, Cross and Scroll, Rugby, President, Resident Assistant TIMOTHY NORMAN JETTE A.B. Pre-Medical Honor: 226 Elliot Avenue Waterbury, Conn. Freshman Baseball, Manager, Varsity Swimming, Manager, Delta Epsilon Sigma, Alpha Ep- silon Delta, Treasurer, Senior Brother Program, Executive As- sistant ROBERT PAUL JACQUES BENJAMIN W. IRIS B.S. Biology A.B. Mathematics 108 Shrewsbury Street 26 Hearthstone Drive Boylston, Mass. Medfield, Mass. Deanis List 2, Arnold Air So- ciety, Resident Assistant, Winter Weekend, AFROTC, Rifle Team gif ' 5 ,: -, -::,, ng-gl y l ' ,,. ' WALTER F. JETTE A.B. Pre-Medical 2 Fraternal Ave. Worcester, Mass. Biology Society DONALD H. JOHNSON, JR. A, PAUL JOHNSON A.B. Hirtory B.S. Accounting-Economicr 3707 Ave. M 208 Kenmore Ave. Brooklyn, N.Y. Ehnhurst, Ill. K of C, NROTC, Trident So- Crew, Chicagoland Club, Presi- ciety, Young Republicans, St. dent, Freshman Lacrosse Thomas More Society, Fresh- man Basketball, Varsity Basket- ball, Senior Brother Program PAUL C. KELEHER, JR. A.B. Economist 117 Church Street Winchester, Mass. 1343 Club, Tfusfeq EFOUOIPIQS ROBERT D. KAVANAUGH DANIEL J. JORDAN Club? Bolton Club, VlCe'Ple5l' A.B. Sociology A.B. Mfzthematicr Clem? Buimess Club? C1355 Colm' 5 Monterey Road 1420 Parkchester Road Cll? Selllol Blolllel Program? Worcester, Mass. Bronx, N.Y. Blologlf SOCWVYS llllllol Plolll Sodality, Worcester Club, Fresh- Dean's List, 3, Math Club, Sen- Commltfeei K of C man Class Council, Senior Broth- ior Brother Program, Economics er Program, Student Senate Club, Crew, Co-Captain THOMAS E. KELLY A.B. Prychology 709 Springfield Ave. Cranford, NJ. 1843 Club, Trustree, Junior Prom Committee, New Jersey Club, Secretary-Treasurer, Choir, Freshman Baseball, Varsity Base- ball, Varsity Football, Resident Assistant STANLEY CHARLES KERBEL, JR. B.S. Sociology 52 Fairfax Road Worcester, Mass. z rm PAUL JOSEPH KERNS, JR. A.B. History 177 Derby Street Newton, Mass. Senior Brother Program, Varsity Basketball, Varsity Baseball 45,49 fl rf af id . fff. , ' i ' H1 ,'.. 7pfj,L295ig?' 'i'ff,.2yh' WILLIAM J. KELLEHER A.B. English 3 Lowell Ave. Holden, Mass. St. Thomas More Society, Emer- ald Shield, Pmfpleg Lacrosse 0,95- THOMAS A. KEVLIN A.B. Hirlory 306 Puritan Road Fairfield, Conn- HAYES A. KIERNAN A.B. Englifh 10 Park Terrace East New York, N.Y. WCHC, Fenwick Theatre Com- pany, Homecoming Committee Chairman, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Committee Chairman 184 R. PETER KIMENER B.S. Economic: 3801 North 23rd Street Arlington, Virginia Purple Key, Treasurer, Resident Assistant, Track, Varsity Foot- ball, Captain, Caught Tbe Bomb FRANCIS A. KIRBY A.B. Clarricr 445 W. Elm St. Brockton, Mass. Eta Sigma Phi, Senior Brother Program, K of C, Sodality, Con- servative Club, Freshman Base- ball, Crew, Wrestling, Manager BRIAN A. KING A.B. Clarricr 8 Sunset Dr. Summit, NJ. Choir, Cmmder, Eta Sigma Phi, History Academy ROBERT J. KIRKWOOD A.B. Economic: 87-18 92nd St. Queens, N.Y. Senior Brother Program, Eco- nomics Club, Winter Weekend Committee, K of C, NROTC, Trident Society, Band, Dance Band, Crew JOHN DREW KISIEL A.B. Efzglifb 4335 Cotter St. Chicago, Ill. Junior Prom Committee, Secre- tary, Student Senate, Clerk, Bridge Club, Treasurer, Crusad- er, Assistant News Editor, Man- aging Editor, Purple Patcber, Activities Editor FREDERICK M. KoPAcz A.B. Prycbology Hawthorne Road Sturbridge, Mass. WCHC, Technical Director, Psi Chi, Historian ANTHONY FRANK KOPEC A.B. Malbematicf 22 Second St. Adams, Mass. Senior Brother Program, Math Club, WCHC, Varsity Baseball JOSEPH 101-IN KQURY ROBERT F. KUMOR A.B. History A.B. Hirtory 241 Washington St. 55 Otis St. Central Falls, R.I. Chicopee Falls, Mass Dean's List, 3, Cmmder Student Senate was 'vm HT JOHN DAVID KWAPISZ A.B. Economicf 6714 Cedar St. Wauwatosa, Wis. Cheerleader, C1'umder,' Young PAUL J. LAMBERT MICHAEL C. LAMBERT I D A.B. History Honor: A.B. Englifh Honor: RePubhCaU5, Tfeasufeff Pfesl' 403 Washington St. 147 So. Windsor Ave. dent! C0f15efVaf1VC Club, Vlee Westfield, NJ. Brightwaters, N.Y. Presidents James Madison Sod' Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Resident As- Deanis List, 1, 2, 5 efY, Pfesideflfl EC01'10fI1iCS Club! sistant, Student Government, Academic Chairman, Crmader, Features Editor, Sodalityg Cross and Scroll, Christian Encounter, Delta Epsilon Sigma St. Thomas More Society 186 PAUL LAMOUREUX A.B. Engliib-Pre-Medical H onori 95 Maple St. Spencer, Mass. Dean's List, 1, 3, Biology So- ciety, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Sen- ior Brother Program JOHN R. LANDIS A.B. French Honors 70-20 149th St. Flushing, N.Y. Pzcrpleg Junior Year Abroad, President of the Institute, Choir, Fenwick Theatre C o m p a n y, Dean's List, 1, 2, 3 Q,-:A ,,4:1+w- ' f XX , I M MARK E. LAWRENCE A.B. Hiftory 71 Highland St. Rockland, Maine C.C.D., Glee Club, Choir, Sodal- ifY JAMES RICHARD LAWLOR, III A.B. Engliih 72 Hale St. Waterbury, Conn. St. Thomas More Society, Senior Brother Program, Chairman, In- tramural Football Commissioner, C.C.D., Young Republicans DENNIS RICHARD LAURIE A.B. Economicf 16 Ideal Rd. Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club KENNETH N. LAVINE A.B. Economic! 70-O3 Harrow St. Forest Hills, N.Y. A.E.C.: Young Republicans, Sen- ior Brother Program, St. Thomas More Society, Economics Club, Varsity Tennis, Captain PAUL M. LYNCH HENRY E. LENTZ A.B. Ecofzomicy FREDRIC JAMES LEWIS 8 Mount DeSales Rd. A.B. German Baltimore, Md. 177 Broadview Ave. Freshman Football, Varsity Foot- New Rochelle, N.Y. ball, O'Melia Award, Threw The Dean's List, 1, 2, 5, junior Year Bomb Abroad Lf, ef- Sa -hues? , ff' ' If .C 3i 4i i:fQ'i?f A i ' 4? A.B. Sociology 32 Ridge Road Groton Long Point, Conn. 1843 Club, Trustee, junior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Program, Yacht Club, Sociology Club, St. Thomas More Society '--nh WILLIAM R. LILLIOTT, III A.B. Englirb 16210 Shaker Boulevard Shaker, Ohio Glee Club, Board of Directors Social Chairman DANIEL S. LUCIA PETER J. LUCAS A.B. Economic! 43 Manchester Road Eastchester, N.Y. Resident Assistant, Student Sen- ate, Senior Brother Program, WCHC, Economics Club 188 AB. Pre-Medical 75 Virginia Ave. Lake Ronkonkama, N.Y. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Vice-PreSi- dent, Sodality, Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, Cmmd- e1',' Freshman Track GREGORY M. LYONS A.B. Economicr 66 Hillcrest Ave. Yonkers, N.Y. , as ROBERT J. MALDONIS A.B. Engliyh 115 Evans Street Watertown, Mass. Senior Brother Program, junior Prom Committee, Cross 84 Cru- cible, Freshman Football, Var- sity Football 'TW'-' 'W V BRIAN MAHER A.B. English 2126 Ocean Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. Fenwick Theater Company, Jun- ior Year Abroad JOHN TIMOTHY MAHER A.B. E7ZgZiJZ7 9441 South Ada Chicago, Ill. Fenwick Theater Company, jun- ior Year Abroad THOMAS PAUL MAINVILLE EDWARD GEORGE MAHONEY A.B. Prychology A.B. English 800 Pleasant Street 35 Barasford Ave. Rochdale, Mass. Lowell, M2155- 1843 Club, T rusree Dean's List, 5, Sodalityg B.J.F. Debating Society, Freshman 189 Coach THOMAS LOUIS MANZO WILLIAM H. MANZ A.B. Pbyyicr A.B. History 111 Culver Ave. 2752 Harrison Ave. jersey City, NJ. Oceanside, N.Y. Dean's List 5, Physics Society, Crzcmclen Senior Brother Pro- President, K of C, Senior Broth- gram, junior Prom Committee er Program PAUL W. MARCHANT A.B. Ecovzomicr 16 Clarence Street Worcester, Mass. JAMES EUGENE MARRION A.B. Psychology 248 Walnut St. Holyoke, Mass. Emerald Shield, Chairman, Cm- mclerg Purple Pcztcberg Vestry, Young Democrats, I.R.C., Home- coming Committee, Senior Bro- ther Program 190 MICHAEL J. MALONEY A.B. Pre-Medical 4532 Middleton Lane Bethesda, Maryland Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Committee Chairman, SO- dality, Senior Brother Program Christian Encounter JOHN E. MARTIN BS. Political Science 3537 Morrell Ave. Philadelphia, Pa. Fenwick Theater Company, I.R. C., NROTC, Trident Society, Senior Brother Program, Cm- Jacler w-2 ROBERT JOHN MASSEY A.B. Economicr 311 Hampshire Drive De Win, N.Y. Resident Assistant, Senior Broth- er Program, Intramural Basket- ball Commissioner, Class Coun- cil, St. Thomas More Society, Central New York Club, Sec.- Treas., Crumcien' Economics Club JOHN M. MCALLISTER A.B. Sociology Honour 555 River Ave. Providence, R.I. Dean's List, 1, 3, I.R.C., Sociol- ogy Club, Chairman, Crzmzcierg Student Senate RICHARD ANTHONY MATARESE A.B. Pre-Medical 379 Wfarburton Ave. Yonkers, N.Y. Band, Fenwick Theater Com- pany, Alpha Epsilon Delta '.-:if JAMES E. MCCARTHY A.B. Economic! Honorr 7200 S. Yates Chicago, Ill. Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Young Dem- ocrats, Sodality, Student Senate, Chicagoland Club, Secretary, Junior Year Abroad, Glee Club, WCHC, I.R.C., Economics Club, A.E.C., Chairman CHRISTOPHER MATTHEWS A B Economzcr 12-42 Southampton Road Philadelphia Penn Student Government Treasurer JOHN J. MCCARTHY, JR. B.S. Hirtory 51 Linnet St. West Roxbury, Mass. Freshman Baseball, Varsity Base- ball, Captain, Resident Assistant, Senior Brother Program, St Thomas More Society WILLIAM FRANCIS MCCARTHY A.B. Hirfory Honorr 18 Church St. Greenfield, Mass. Deans List 1, 2, 3, junior Class Secretary, Cmrazier, Managing Editor, K of C, Purple Pnlcber, Copy Editor, Emerald Shield, Semper Fidelis Society, Senior Brother Program, Lacrosse DAVID MCCORMACK A.B. Hirtory 145 Robin Road West Hartford, Conn. NROTC, Trident Society, I.R.C., Senior Brother Program, Resi- dent Assistant, Soccer, Track, junior Prom Committee, Win- ter Weekend Committee EDWARD M. MCCUSKER A.B. English 1207 Forbes St. East Hartford, Conn. Varsity Crew 'eff' x....... W. W9 fix WILLIAM A. MCEACHERN A.B. Economicr Honor! 70 Stack St. Portsmouth, N.I-I. Deans List, 1, 2, 3, Purple Key, Cross and Scroll, Crnmcief, Fea- tures Editor, Economics Club, President, Resident Assistant, Emerald Shield, Alpha Sigma Nu, Delta Epsilon Sigma, Young Democrats Club WILLIAM J. MCDONALD A.B. English North St. Chesire, Mass. AFROTC, Arnold Air Society, Senior Brother Program 192 WILLIAM X. MCDERMOTT A.B. Prycbology 540 Albany Ave. Kingston, N.Y. Psi Chi, Secretary, Rugby, jun- ior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Program ANDREW J. MCELANEY, JR. A.B. Economics 37 Waban Road Quincy, Mass. Economics Club, St. Thomas More Society, St. John Berch- mans Society, Crzmzder, Assistant Features Editor, Hockey FRANCIS X. MCGUIRE JAMES F. MCGINLEY BS. Accomzring-Ecofzomicr A.B. Hixzoiy ' i 65 Waldorf Court 195 Hanover St. Brooklyn, N.Y. Wilkes Barre, Pa. K of C, Deputy Grand Knight C mmder, Fenwick Theatre Com- Junior Prom Committee, Purple PQUYQ Biology Sociefys HiSf01'Y Patclaer, Accountant, Class Coun Academy gil PHILIP T. MCLAUGHLIN A.B. History 32M Russell Ave. Nashua, N.H. C.C.D., Vice-President, Senior Brother Program, Resident As- sistant, Track JOHN J. MCLAUGHLIN A.B. Ploiloropby-German Honor: 22 Bellingham Road Chestnut Hill, Mass. Dean's List, 2, 3g 1845 Club, Trustee, Freshman Class Presi- dent, Resident Assistant, K of C, Student Government, Alumni Board Chairman, WCHC, Ski Club, Purple Key, Freshman Baseball, Hockey Q 'Q JOHN D. MCINERNY A.B. Malbemalicf 46 Sherwood Road Dumont, N.J. Dean's List, 2, 3, Math Club President, History Academy, Senior Brother Program JAMES G. MEADE A.B. Spanifh 49 Struckland Place Manhasset, N.Y. Conservative Club, WCI-IC, Jun- ior Year Abroadg Young Repub- licans, St. Thomas More Society WILLIAM M. MCNAMARA A.B. Mathematic! 190 Rutherglen Ave. Providence, R.I. f ,Q ,JY , N: F '--11+ RICHARD P. MEDUSKI A.B. Ecofzomicf-Accounting 34 Huntington Ave. Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club ARTHUR J. MELIA, JR. PATRICK L. MEEHAN KEVIN L. MEEHAN A.B. Biology A.B. Englirb A.B. Englirb 41 Stacy Road 1254 Crest Haven Drive 2009 Ferndale Drive Randolph, Mass. Silver Spring, Md. Wilmington, Del. C7'ZlI6ZlZ767',' WCHCg Biology So- ciety, Lacrosse, Senior Brother Program 194 JOHN S. MILES A.B. French 50 Averill St. Barre, Vt. Dean's List, 2, Sodality, junior Year Abroad, l.D.C., K of C an 'FN xn ANDREW M. MISSETT A.B. Pre-Medical 1790 Boulevard West Hartford, Conn. Biology Society, Sophomore Secretary, AFROTC MICHAEL A. MONJOY A.B. Englirb Honorr 840 Astor Ave. Bronx, N.Y. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, B.J.F. De- bating Society, Cmmden' Senior Brother Program, Delta Epsilon Sigma Class ROBERT A. MORAN A.B. History 22 Victoria Road Arlington, Mass. Dean's List 2, junior Year Abroad, Hockey, I.R.C. JAMES P. MORAN WILLIAM J. MONROE A.B. Economici A.B. English 23 Beacon St. 757 East 230th Street Natick, Mass. New York, N.Y. Dorm Council, Senior Brother Program, Student Senate, junior 195 Prom Committee, Business Club DAVID JAMES MORIARITY AB. English 57 Uncatena Ave. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List 2, 3, Senior Brother Program, Alpha Sigma Nu, Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer, Track, Cross Country THOMAS J. MORONEY AB. Mathematics 4 Warner Street Salem, Mass. WCHC, Music Director, Public Relations Director, NROTC, Cross Currents, Editor, Senior Brother Program, Trident So- ciety, Secretary, Winter Week- end, Decorations Chairman GREGORY W MORRISSEY JOHN J. MOYNIHAN AB. History 34 Doncaster Circle THOMAS JUSTIN MORAN AB, English 39 Warwick Place Port Washington, N.Y. WCHC, Director of Engineers, Executive Board, K of C, Senior Brother Program, Homecoming Committee A B pbyfm. Lynniield, Mass. 92 57 Gettysburg St. Bellerose N.Y. MICHAEL G. MUcc1GRosso Deans LISI l 2 3, Delta Ep- AB, His-wry silon Sigma Physics Society, 1312 Raleigh Road Biology SOC1CfY Mamaroneck, N.Y. 196 I.R.C., Cross and Crucible, K of C, Biology Society, Crusader JAMES FRANCIS MULHERN A.B. Psychology 360 Sanders Buffalo, N.Y. Dean's List, 2, 3, Psi Chi THOMAS F. MULLINS A.B. Biology 8 Rochelle St. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List, 3, Student Senate, Biology Society, Vice President, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Young Re- publicans DONALD L. MULLARE A.B. Pfycbology 70 Hawthorne Road Braintree, Mass. Glee Club, Student Leader, Board of Directors, Intercollegiate Cho- rale, Psi Chi, Senior Brother Program, A.E.C., Choir, Purple Prztclrer HARRY J. MULRY, JR. A.B. History 80 Lexington Street Westbury, N.Y. Homecoming, Chairman, St. Thomas More Society, Purple, Lacrosse, Junior Prom Commit- tee, Met Club, President, Senior Brother Program, Cheerleader GERALD T. MULLIGAN A.B. Hiftory 441 West Roxbury Pkwy. West Roxbury, Mass. President of the Student Body: Resident Assistant, Purple Key, Secretary of Student Govern- ment, C.C.D., I.R.C., Vice Presi- dent, Senior Brother Program, Sophomore Class Secretary, Young Democrats' Club 8 ' I FRANCIS X. MURPHY A.B. Pre-Medical 12 Maynard St. Westboro, Mass. f 2 PATRICK J. MURPHY A.B. Biology Honor! 6445 N. Navajo Chicago, Ill. Dean's List, l,3, Criimiler, Head- lines Editor, Alpha Epsilon Del- ta, Biology Society, Biology joiirmzl, Co-Editor, Junior Prom Committee, Swimming, Co-Cap- tain . ,xv ,H r I 1 1' -3, Q M 2 if 'vw f - ,f.M,,:- -1v4 -s. JOSEPH MICHAEL MURPHY, JR. B.S. Biology 77 Ashcraft Road Medford, Mass. Dean's List, 2, 3, Biology Socie- ty, Alpha Epsilon Delta, K of C, Senior Brother Program, Resi- STEPHEN W. MURPHY A.B. Sociology 2l7 Highland Ave. dent Assistant, Junior Prom Ridgewood, N.J. Committee, Homecoming Com- mittee, Freshman Baseball Senior Brother Program, Sociol ogy Club if ma JAMES J. NAGLE A.B. Eiiglirb 5851 North Kenneth Ave. Chicago, Ill. ROBERT E. NAYLOR TIMOTHY F. NANGLE giggle fragile? , Cmmdeyf Folk A.B. Biology Honorr B.S. Ecoiiomicr-Accoimliiig um? Chufsemor Bfofbef Pro' 29 Christopher Dr. 6209 Washington St. ifm' C Ou' Emerflld Shleldl ,St Milton, Mass. St. Louis, Mo. Omas More Socletyg Fenwlck Dean's List, l, 2, 3, Alpha Ep- silon Delta, Secretary, President, Commmee Delta Epsilon Sigma, Biology So- ciety, Board of Directors, Senior Brother Program, Winter Week- end Committee, A.E.C., AFRO- TC, Commander, Arnold Air Society 198 Theatre Company, Junior Prom PAUL B. NEDZA AB. Sociology 206 Hendrickson Ave. Lynnbrook, N.Y. HENRY A. NOCELLA A.B. Pre-Medical 1022 85th St. Brooklyn, N.Y. Met Club Trustee, Biology So- ciety, Student Senate, Senior Brother Program, Criimdefg Jun- ior Prom Committee, Freshman Lacrosse, Young Republicans, B.J.F. Debating Society JOSEPH JOHN NEIDENBACH B.S. Biology 1717 N. Linden Avenue Chicago, Ill. K of C, Grand Knight, Vestry, Biology Society RICHARD PAUL NEVINS A.B. Hiftoify 7 Jonathan Circle Windsor, Conn. Dean's List 2, 3, I.R.C., Vestry' 3 AFROTC, Drill Team, Sodality, Crusader, Circulation Manager, Phi Alpha Theta, Young Demo- C1'2.fS CARL D. NEITZEL A.B. Prycbology 12 3 First St. Yonkers, N.Y. AFROTC, Drill Team, Rifle Team, Met Club, Trustee, Flying Club, Cheerleader KENNETH E. NEUMANN B.S. Ecoiiomicy R.F.D. 9452 Canterbury, Conn. Conservative Club, Young Re- publicans, Secretary, Winter Weekend Committee, NROTC, Rifle Team, Captain, Knight Watch, Trident Society, Eco- nomics Club JAMES MICHAEL NORTON A.B. Pre-Medical H ozzorf 107 Kenswick Rd. South Portland, Maine THOMAS D. O'BoYLE Deans List 1, 3, Alpha Epsilon A.B. Sociology Fifa? ' 'Y Delta, Biology Society, Co-Chair man, Crumderg Class Council, Senior Class Vice President, Sen- ior Brother Program, Homecom 78 Robsart Rd. Kenilworth, Ill. Sociology Club, I.R.C., Young Democrats, Crumcierg Purple, ing Committee, Junior Prom Senior Brother Program, Co- Committee EI Chairman JOHN C. O,BRIEN A.B. Hiirlory 70 Larchwood Dr. Cambridge, Mass. Crzzmder, I.R.C., Senior Brother Program, Emerald Shield CHRISTOPHER P. O,CONNELL A.B. Hiflory 748 Cascade Rd. Cincinnati, Ohio Deans List 2, 3, Sodality, Fen- wick Theatre Company, Asst. Business Manager, Swimming Team, Junior Year Abroad, Pres- ident of the Institute, Vestry, I.R.C., St. Thomas More Society BLAINE J. O'CONNELL A.B. Prycbology 21 Hadley Rd. Methuen, Mass. Dean's List, 3, NROTC, Winter Weekend, Chairman, Psi Chi, President, Merrimack V a 1 l e y Club, Vice President, Resident Assistant 200 JOSEPH WILLIAM O'BRIEN, JR. A.B. Sociology 9643 South Hoyne Ave. Chicago, Ill. C.C.D. President, Crzmzden' Busi- ness Club, Sec.-Treas., Senior Brother Program N? cu-Q, DENNIS M. O'CoNNELL A.B. Hirtory 27 Waterbury Rd. Montclair, N.J. NROTC JoSE M. OLBES B.S. Economic: 9 Harvard Rd. Forbes Park Makati Rizae, Philippines Economics Club, Sodality Soccer JOSEPH WILLIAM O'CoNNoR JAMES L. O'DEA A.B. Economicr A.B. Englirh 32 Farlow Rd. 60 Winthrop Avee. Newton, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Economics Club, NROTC, Tri- dent Society, Junior Year Abroad ROBERT G. 0'KEEFE A.B. I-Iirtory 73 Ingleside Ave. Winthrop, Mass. K of C, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Ski Club, Business Club, Senior Brother Program, Ger- man Academy, Sodality, l.R.C. Young Democrats, Freshman Basketball, Varsity Baseball. JAMES P. OyDONNELL A.B. Englirla 516 Western Ave. Augusta, Maine Dean's List 2, 3, Senior Brother Program, Class Council HUGH B. OMALLEY A.B. Hiffory 23 Barnard Rd. Worcester, Mass. Purple Key, I.R.C., Young Re publicans, Piirple Patcberg Var- sity Basketball RALPH A. ORLANDELLA B.S. Biology 117 Lexington St. Burlington, Mass. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society, Crew, Co-Captain JOHN V. O,NEIL A.B. Hirtory 72 Southwood Rd. Newington, Conn. H STEPHEN W. O'LEARY A.B. Political Science 53-27 160th St. Flushing, N.Y. N. THOMAS OsGooD B.S. Sociology 570 South Main St. Nashua, N.H. WCHC, Sales Director, Station Manager, junior Prom Comrnit- tee, Biology Society, Sociology Club, Resident Assistant, Senior Brother Program, Purple Patch- er,' Business Club, Freshman Baseball Manager, Varsity Base- ball Manager PHILIP J. O'S1-IEA A.B. Errglifb 159 Beard Ave. Buffalo, N .Y. Purple, Business Manager, jun- ior Prom Committee, St. Thomas More Society, Homecoming Committee ARTHUR EUGENE OSIECKI AB. Sociology 30 Forester St. Salem, Mass. Dean's List 3, NROTC, Trident Society, Chairman, Cro!! Cin'- renn, Art Editor, Sociology Club, Senior Brother Program, Winter Weekend, Ticket Chairman JAMES D. OWENS B.S. Biology 3820 Veazey St. N.W. Washington, D.C. Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Senior Brother Program WILLIAM D. PANDOLPHE B.S. Cbeminry 902 Ridge Road Wethersfield, Conn. Cross and Crucible, K of C, Senior Brother Program THOMAS J. PARCIAK A.B. Mathematic! 170 Vernon Ave. Rockville, Conn. Mathematics Club, Junior Prom Committee, Soccer, Manager RALPH K. PACKARD, JR. AB. EL'07Z077ZiC.f 102 Quaker Lane Villanova, Pa. Deanls List 2, 3, NROTC, Pin'- ple Pizfcber, Circulation Man- ager, Student Senate, EXtra-Cu.r- ricular Affairs Chairman, Cric- nzcier, Asst. Business Manager, Cro!! Ciirreizrg Class Council, NROTC Band, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Pro- gram, St. Thomas More Society, Economics Club, Winter Week- end Committee, Trident Society' I.R.C., Young Democrats 3 RICHARD J. PEDERSEN AB. E12gli!b 171072075 3615 California St. Omaha, Neb. Rhodes Scholar Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Fenwick Scholar, Cross and Scroll, Chairman, C7'1l.l'd6i87',' So- dality, Secretary, Resident Assis- tant, Class Council, Emerald Shield, Boxing CHARLES F. PELTIER BS. Mathemalicr 13 Dehart Ave. MICHAEL PETER PERs1co Sharon, Mass. A.B Soczology RICHARD M- PEIRCE Dean's List 3, Glee Club, Board 1450 Essex Road A.B.Hifl01'y of Directors, Freshman Leader, Teaneck NJ 1043 Riverside Ave. Intercollegiate Chorale, Paks, St. Thomas More Society C C D SOrI1CrS6'f, Mass. Fenwick Theatre Company, Sociology Club Glee Club Fen Resident ASSiSfaI1f Choir wick Theatre Company 4.3 THOMAS A. PEZZELLA A.B. Pre-Medical 17 Shamrock St. Worcester, Mass. ANTHONY M. PETTOLINA A.B. Engliyb 415 Hollywood Ave. Crestwood, N.Y. Cmmderg Purple Patcherg K of C, Fenwick Theatre Company, junior Prom Committee, Sodality 204 THoMAs G. PETER A.B. Economicr 110 Enfield Road Baltimore, Md. Crumderg Economics Club, I.R C.g Young Democrats Club, Sen- ior Brother Program I J. TIMOTHY PHALAN A.B. H istory 1003 N. James St. Rome, N.Y. Dean's List, 3, Senior Brother Program, History Academy, C. C.D., Executive Board THOMAS G. POWERS A.B. French 266 Old Westboro Road Grafton, Mass. Sodality, Vestry, French Club, Senior Brother Program, Trident Society, B.j.F. Debating Society, C.C.D., Executive Board LUKE M. PITTONI A.B. Economicr 51 Wfatts Place Lynbrook, N.Y. Dorm Council, Cheerleader JAMES WILLIAM PORCARO A.B. Hirtory I-Ionom 65 Barry Lane Bardonia, N.Y. Dean's List, 1, 2, 3, Cross and Scroll, I.R.C., Delta Epsilon Sig- ma, Senior Brother Program 205 Dean's List, 2, Student Senate, ROBERT A. PLASSE A.B. Englirh 262 Connecticut Ave. Springfield, Mass. C1'z4mcie1',' K of C, Senior Broth- er Program, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Homecoming Committee JACK WILSON POPE A.B. Maztbemmficr 2823 Randleman Rd. Greensboro, N.C. Dean's List, 2, 3, Student Senate, junior Prom Committee, Math- ematics Club, Class Council MARK G. PRESTERO B.S. Cbemimty 523 65th St. ANTHONY VINCENT PROTO, JR. A.B. Biology 61 Stuyvessant Ave. New Haven, Conn. Dean's List, l, 2, 3, Biology So- ciety, President, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Senior Brother Program, Vestrv Clarendon Hills, Ill. ww 4 ,Q--f 'X Qu Tennis JAMES J. REAGAN JAMES QUINN PETER J. PRZYBYLA A.B. Hiflory A.B. English A.B. Economic! 51 Alvarado Ave. Worcester, Mass. 67 Fredrick St. Newington, Conn. Cmmder, Fenwick Theatre Com- pany, Choir, Purple Patclaer, Junior Prom Committee, Home- coming Committee, Senior Broth- er Program 206 252 Chase Road North Dartmouth, Mass. WCHC, Young Republicans, Conservative Club, President, James Madison Society, Senior Brother Program N 'Sf ROBERT JOHN PROVENZANO A.B. Pre-Medical 343 Pearl St. Kingston, N.Y. Biology Society, I.R.C., Glee Club, Senior Brother Program, EJ ...l ,. .. ... JAMES C. REYNOLDS AB. Economics 59 Revere Pkwy. Pittsfield, Mass. EDWARD Russo, JR. A.B. Pre-Medical 215 Paddington Rd. Baltimore, Md. Biology Society, Varsity Lacrosse, Manager, WCHC FRANCIS X. ROCHE AB. History 1091 Water St. Fitchburg, Mass. Class Council, B.J.F. Debating Society, Crusader, Features Edi- tor, junior Prom Committee, St. Thomas More Society, History Academy, Track PAUL W. ROEHRENBECK B.S. Pbyficx 10 Huron Avenue Jersey City, NJ. Young Democrats, Cmmder, Amateur Radio Society, President THOMAS EDWARD RooNEY AB. H irtory 23 Glenridge Rd. Whitesboro, N.Y. Dean's List, 2, Young Democrats, Vice President, Sodality, Senior Brother Program, NROTC, Tri- dent Society, Treasurer, Home- coming Committee, Business Club, Track WILLIAM MICHAEL RONEY B.S. Economics-Accomzting 4 Prince St. Danvers, Mass. Dean's List, 3, Young Republi- cans Club, Economics Club WCHC, Business Club JOSEPH W. SACK STEPHEN EDWARD ST. ONGE A.B. Polilical Science A.B. Biology 32 Gates Ave. 30 Ringgold St. Jersey City, NJ. Haverhill, Mass. l.R.C., Freshman Basketball, Var- Biology Society, Varsity La- Sify BHSCbH11 crosse, Merrimak Valley Club STEPHEN L. SAWYER A.B. History WAYNE JOSEPH SAssANo 14766 Mettetal A.B. German Detroit, Mich. 76 Cottwell Dr. B.j.F. Debating Society, Senior Wethersheld, Conn. Brother P r o g r a m, Crumderg Dean's List, 3, Cross and Cru- Christian Encounter cible, Emerald Shield, Senior Brother Program, Varsity Fenc- ing Team 208 EUGENE PATRIC RUsso A.B. Pre-Medical 173 Wiclcham Rd. Garden City, N.Y. Dean's List, 3, Sodality, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society, Resident Assistant, Senior Broth- er Program, Varsity Lacrosse, Freshman Baseball L. PHILIP L. SBARBARO B.S. Economist-Accounting 1646 So. 14th Ave. Maywood, Ill. Dean's List, 1, 2, junior Prom, Accountant, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Varsity Crew GEORGE WILLIAM SAYER, III AB. Prycbology 28 Manor Rd. Excelsior, Minn. Sodalityg Student Senate, Dorm Council, C1'zzmde1',' Conservative Club, Young Republicans, Grad- uate Studies Committeeg Crew JOHN T. SCHRIVER A.B. Economicf 222 Woodbine Ave. Wilmette, Ill. Class Council, AFROTCg Junior Year Abroad CARL J. SCHMITT A B.S. Economic:-Accounting 111 Ruskin Rd. Eggertsville, N.Y. Economics Clubg Young Repub- licans, Conservative Clubg Stu- dent Senatorg Western New York Club, President, A.E.C. TERENCE E. SCANLON A.B. Englirb 266 Dorchester Rd. Akron, Ohio JAMES J. SCIACCA KENNETH A. SCOTT AB. Hirtory B.S. Natural Science 258 Boulevard St. 43 Melrose Scarsdale, N.Y. Boylston, Mass. C mmdevg' I.R.C. 209 MICHAEL J. SCOTT A.B. Hiftory 27 Fenton Ave. Binghamton, N.Y. Fenwick Theatre Company, Pro- duction Manager -nw, STEPHEN D. SEERY A.B. Hirtofy 71 Richfield Rd. Arlington, Mass. Sodality, NROTC, NRCTC Band, Commander, Crusader Dance Band, Band, Manager, Trident Society, Board of Gov- ernors, Student Senate, Class Council JOHN P. SINDONI A.B. History 122 Wlillumae Drive Syracuse, N.Y. Dean's List, 2, 3, Alpha Sigma Nu, St. Thomas More Society, Crusader, Sports Editor, Purple Key, Chairman, Emerald Shield, Resident Assistant, Freshman Football 'Wir ANTHONY J. SILVA A.B. Sociology 3 Fielding St. New Bedford, Mass. RAYMOND KENNETH SHERMAN A.B. Engliih 1109 Cherokee St. New Bedford, Mass. Resident Assistant, Dorm Coun- cil, Senior Brother Program SAMUEL WILLIAM SHOEN A.B. Pre-Medical 7211 N. Tatum Blvd. ming 1843 Club, Trustee, Vice Presi- dent, Junior Prom, Chairman, Prom Prelude, Chairman, Senior Brother Program, Sodality, NR- OTC, Trident Society, Lacrosse, Homecoming Committee Phoenix, Ariz. Sodality, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society, Varsity Swim- qw EUGENE F. SISCO A.B. Biology 6329 N. Kedvale Chicago, Ill. Pzirple Patcber, Editor-in-chief, Purple, Art Editor, Purple Key, Cross and Scroll, Emerald Shield, Prom Prelude, Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom, Committee Chairman, Fenwick Art Exhibi- tion Awards PETER T. SMITH A.B. Pre-Medical 7751 Gissler Ave. Richmond Heights, Mo. Fenwick Theatre Company, Pres- ident, Business Manager, Young Republicans, Vice President, Emerald Shield, Spear, Cross and Scroll, Sodality, Resident Assis- tant, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Soc- cer, Conservative Club, junior Prom Committee JOSEPH P. SMALDONE A.B. Hirzfoify 102 Elmwood St. Valley Stream, N.Y. Dean's List, 1, 3, Senior Brother Program, Committee Chairman, NROTC, Trident Society, Board of Governors, Crorr Cziweiitr, News Editor, Resident Assistant, Semper Fidelis Society, Winter Weekend Committee, Alpha Sig- ma Nu, I.R.C., History Acad- emy, Phi Alpha Theta, Track PHILIP JUSTIN SMITH A.B. Sociology 760 Oak Spring Lane Libertyville, Ill. Cmmiler, News Editor 211 BERNARD PATRICK SMITH BS. Economics-Accozziifiizg 116 Summer St. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List, 2, junior Class Vice President, Class Council, Senior Brother Program, Business Club, Executive Board, Student Senate, Dorm Council GREGORY A. SMITH A.B. Sociology 165 Gregory Avenue West Orange, New Jersey Freshman Football: Varsity Foot- ball, Wrestling, Co-Captain STEPHEN R. SMITH AB. Efzglifb 52 Hyde Ave. Newton, Mass. C rzmzderg Emerald Shield, Junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Committee, Purple, l.R.C., Fen- wick Theatre Company 1:55 :Pl 1 . ' A 5' ,fm ' J r 7? GARY P. SQUIER A.B. Hirtory 70 West St. Seymour, Conn. Glee Club, Paks, Gallagher Film Committee, Senior Brother Pro- gram Society Q iii? in s . . M, .,, V. ' g if .r I- Q:-. E' .- H , ,Lv .45 .gf . Q CARL R. SPITZNAGEL A.B. Marbemaricr 521 South Delriclge Dr. Cincinnati, Ohio Cmmeierg Conservative Club, Class Council, Senior Brother Program, Mathemancs Club, Sec- retary, Deutsche Ubersetzungs- bund 212 JAMES CHARLES SOLDANI AB. Evzglifb 7454 De La Farge Drive . ' 4 San jose, Calif. 'Ni Band, Secretary-Treasurer, Fen- wick Theatre Company, Biology 1' THOMAS REGIS SPACEK BS. Mathematic! 997 Brent Drive Wantagh, N.Y. WCHC, Varsity Fencing, Co- Captain, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Mathematics Club, Cross and Crucible Society GEORGE G. SPELLMAN, JR. AB. Prjfcbology-Pre-Medical Honor! 3849 Jones St. Sioux City, Iowa Dean's List, 2, 3, Cross and Scroll Society, Treasurer, Band, Varsity Fencing, Varsity Crew, Deutsche Ubersetzungsbund A. ARTHUR STEELE B.S. Biology Honors 2400 Nicholby Drive Wilmington, Del. Dean's List, 1, Fenwick Theatre Company, Executive Board, Cross and Scroll Society, Alpha Sigma Nu JOSEPH J. TEPAS, III A.B. Pre-Medical 301 Paddington Road Baltimore, Md. Dean's List, 3, Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Washing- ton Club, President, junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Com- mittee, Senior Brother Program, Committee Chairman, Varsity Lacrosse ROBERT G. STEVENSON A.B. Hiflory 318 Jordan Road New Milford, NJ. Dean's List, 3, Cmmder, Sports Editor, Senior Brother Program, Lacrosse, Purple Prztcbef, C.C.D. RALPH EDWARD STRUZZIERO B.S. Englirb 31 Vinal Ave. Scituate, Mass. 1843 Club, Trustee, Varsity Foot ball FTX JOSEPH ZACHARY TAYLOR, JR. A.B. Hixtory 8801 Fircrest Place Alexandria, Va. Young Republicans, NROTC, Semper Fidelis Society, Resident Assistant, Cmmderg Young Dem- ocrats, Senior Brother Program, Rugby, Freshman Lacrosse ROBERT R. SWAN AB. Pre-Medical 28 Harvest Moon Road Easton, Conn. Fenwick Theatre Company, Young Republicans Club, Senior Brother Program DAVID A. T IccHI A.B. Economicr 454 South Main St. West Bridgewater, Mass. Dean's List, 2, 3, Economics Club, Alpha Sigma Nu, Senior Brother Program, WCHC RICHARD H T UBBS, JR. A.B. Englirb 11204 Lund Place Kensington, Md. Band, Drum Major, Fenwick Theatre Company, Production Manager, Young Democrats Club, junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Committee Chair- man, Business Club, Vice Presi- dent, Senior Brother Program, Biology Society, Fencing WILLIAM ANTONY ToscHEs A.B. Clasficr Pre-Medical 202 Purchase St. Milford, Mass. Dean's List, 3, Purple Patcher, Eta Sigma Phi, National Presi- dent, Young Republicans Club, Class Council, I.R.C., Biology Society, Gallagher Film Series, Co-Chairman, Senior Brother Program STEPHEN T ERRELL A.B. Economics 32 Cedar St. Ashland, Mass. 0 LEO L. TULLY A.B. Economic! Honour 50 Montgomery Circle New Rochelle, N.Y. Deanls List, 1, 2, 3, Cmmder, Business Manager, Economics Club, Business Club, A.F..C. 214 JOHN C. T UNNEY A.B. Hiftory 248 Wfall St. Corning, N.Y. Intramurals M.V.P. H25 253' .T YJ :if t Q A .v f -1 5 AML sf? S? DAVID J. VARNERIN A.B. Economics 316 Common St. Wfatertown, Mass. Dean's List, 3g Economics Club, Young Democrats, l.R.C.g Bridge Club, Senior Brother Program, Cross and Crucible WILLIAM T. VAIL, JR. B.S. Ec01z0mic5-Accozmzifzg 5815 Maryhurst Dr. Hyattsville, Md. Business Club, Junior Prom Com- p AUL J. V ALCOUR mittee, Freshman Basketball A.B. Economics 56 Yale St. Wincester, Mass. Class Council, Young Republi- cans, I.R.C., Boston Club, Trus- tee, Biology Society, Business Club, President, Vestry, Lacrosse THOMAS J. VENUS BS. Economics 1 Limestone Rd. Ridgefield, Conn. Physics Society, Economics So- ciety, K of C, Varsity Fencing, C0-Captain JOHN CHARLES VINsoN A.B. History 33 Horace Rd. Belmont, Mass. Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Committee, C 7'ILf6Z6Z67'A,' Pm'- ple Patcberg l.R.C., Young Dem- ocratsg K of C, NROTC, Trident Society, Economics Club GERARD ERNEST W. VOYER A.B. Hiftory 39 Gillis St. Nashua, Nl-I. ROGER J. WAINDLE A.B. Ecofzomicr 1335 Berkshire St. Grosse Pt., Mich. Marching Band, Student Leader FRANCIS JOHN WARD BS. Biology 73 Grove St. Elizabeth, NJ. Sodality, Biology Society, K of C, Warden, Yacht Club, Class Council, Homecoming Commit- tee, Young Republicans, Senior Brother Program KENNETH J. WALSH AB. Prycbology 4737 West Zllth St. Fairview Park, Ohio Fencing Team, Manager, Purple Patcberg Psi Chi LAWRENCE J. WALKER B.S. Natural Sciences ROBERT S WALLY 36 Ayrault Street A.B. Polztzcal Sczence Newport, Rhode Island 21 BUSIOI Sf WCHC Worcester Mass ROBERT H. WALLYN A.B. Philosophy-Pre-Medical 1935 Hickory Rd. Homewood, Ill. Dean's List, 2, 3, Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Senior Brother Program 216 4 WILLIAM JOSEPH WATERS B.S. Prychology 105 Hilltop Rd. Syracuse, N.Y. Biology Society, Young Republi- 1 cans, Senior Brother Program, junior Prom Committee, Home- coming Committee ROBERT F. WHITE A.B. Engliib 6 Danbury Rd. South Weymouth, Mass. Purple, Assistant Editor, WCHC Executive Board, Director of An- nouncers, Amateur Radio Socie- ty, Vice President, Gallagher Film Series, Emerald Shield, Swimming, Co-Manager 7 MICHAEL J. WEAVER A.B. Pre-Medical 1745 Sunset Dr. Hamilton, Ohio Dean'S List, l, 3, Bridge Club, Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Conservative Club, Senior Brother Program RAYMOND E. F. WEAVER BS. Pbyricr 1009 Jacoby St. Johnstown, Pa. Dean'S List 3, Vestry, Physics Society, Freshman Lacrosse, Var sity Football JOSEPH EDWARD WHITE DENNIS HUGH WEBSTER A.B. Englirb A.B. Biology 755 Thatcher Ave. Friends Rd. River Forest, Ill. Setauket, N.Y. Swimming, Co-Captain Biology Society 217 EDWIN PAUL WHITTEMORE AB. Prycbology 29 Dawes Rd. Lexington, Mass. Biology Society, Senior Brother Program, Purple Pizrcber, Soccer, Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball RALPH D. WILLARD AB. Political Scieizce 44 Willets Dr. Syosset, N.Y. Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball, Captain, Senior Brother Program ., 45955 A '... as r,I'f.., .,-,,3v:.:,fy:1v- . Y T ERRENCE FRANCIS WILMER A.B. Pfychology 3815 Nicholson St. Hyattsville, Md. Dean's List 2g Resident Assis- tant, Emerald Shield, Senior Brother Program A ,Ain LESTER A. YORK LAWRENCE C. WILSON HAROLD J. WILSON A.B. Pre-Meclicizl A.B. Pfycbology A.B. Economic! 34 Bay View Dr. Rt. 2, Conway Road 5 Buchingham Rd. Portland, Maine Chesterfield, Missouri Natick, Mass. Purple Pizlcbef, Photography Edi- Freshman Basketball tor, Alpha Epsilon Delta, His- torian, Yacht Club, Biology So- ciety 218 Richard J. Keenan January 27, 1946-December 19, 1964 avvafinw Michael A. Cunnion Apfn 7, 1945-July 15, 1966 Mr. John A. Anderson Dr. 8: Mrs. Charles H. Baumann Mr. 8: Mrs. H. C. Blake Dr. 8: Mrs. Alfred Bongiorno Mr. 8: Mrs. L. H. Bridenstine Dr. 8: Mrs. Donald W. Bussmann Mrs. James F. Casey Dr. 8: Mrs. Paul C. Collura Mr. 8: Mrs. John J. Connolly Mr. 8: Mrs. Peter G. Dirr Mr. 8: Mrs. John J. Dolan Mr. 8: Mrs. William T. Earls Mr. 8: Mrs. Richard J. Fruin Mr. 8: Mrs. Asa George Mr. 8: Mrs. George S. Hendrie Mr. 8: Mrs. J. Donald Jordan Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank P. Kopec Mr. 8: Mrs. Ralph J. Amendola Mr. 8: Mrs. S. Apito Mr. 8: Mrs. John E. Arpe, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. John Bachini, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Louis J. Balestra Mr. 8: Mrs. Bernard L. Baumann Mr. 8: Mrs. John J. Berry, Jr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Carl P. Bradbury Mr. 8: Mrs. James L. Brett Mr. 8: Mrs. Gerald J. Butler Mr. 8: Mrs. Philip R. Byrne Mr. 8: Mrs. Marion J. Cadley Mr. 8: Mrs. John L. Callahan Mrs. E. B. Clark Contributors The Landis Family Mr Mr Mr Dr. Mr Mr Dr. Mr. . 8: Mrs. Kenneth N. LaVine . 8: Mrs. Edwin A. McGuire . 8: Mrs. John J. Mclnerney 8: Mrs. F. J. McMahon . 8: Mrs. John R. Miles . 8: Mrs. Daniel F. Moriarty 8: Mrs. John B. Murphy 8: Mrs. Joseph W. O'Brien Jose M. Olbes Mr. 8: Mrs. Stephen W. O'Leary Mr. 8: Mrs. C. B. Pedersen Dr. 8: Mrs. Anthony Persico Mr. 8: Mrs. Aloysius F. Power Mr. 8: Mrs. Peter C. Schmitt Mr. Joseph J. Sindoni Patrons Mr Mr . 8: Mrs. Francis J. Cooney . 8: Mrs. Robert M. Cox, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Thomas J. Cox, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. John Craddock Mr. 8: Mrs. Stanley J. Deptula, J Dr. 8: Mrs. Herman J. Dick Mr. Charles L. Domson Dr. Mr Mr 8: Mrs. F. Downey . 8: Mrs. William L. Downey . 8: Mrs. William F. Doyle Mr. 8: Mrs. John P. Dyer Mr. 8: Mrs. James F. Egan Mr. 8: Mrs. G. C. Emmons Mr. 8: Mrs. A. S. Esposito 220 Mr. 8: Mrs. james V. Fallon Mrs. C. Fitzpatrick Mrs. J. H. Flynn Mr. 8: Mrs. Paul Foraste Mr. 8: Mrs. Edward J. Freeman Mr. 8: Mrs. Walter J. Friese Mr. 8: Mrs. john P. Galligan Mr. 8: Mrs. Carl Gartner Mr. 8: Mrs. joseph R. Glennon, Jr. Dr. 8: Mrs. Thomas P. Glynn Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank J. Godek Mr. 8: Mrs. Sidney Gorter Dr. Charles M. Graney Mrs. Carol Greeley Mr. 8: Mrs. Thomas E. Haley, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Joseph A. Harrigan Mr. 8: Mrs. Robert Q. Hinckle Mr. 8: Mrs. Francis W. Hogan Mr. 8: Mrs. W. Edward Howard Mrs. Emery H. Huff Dr. William F. Iacobellis Mr. 8: Mrs. Benjomin W. Iris, Jr. Dr. 8: Mrs. Norman T. jerte Mr. 8: Mrs. Arthur L. Johnson Dr. 8: Mrs. Paul C. Keleher Mr. 8: Mrs. Robert L. Kelly Mr. 8: Mrs. Stanley Kerbel Mr. 8: Mrs. C. J. Kisiel Mr. 8: Mrs. H. Edgar Lentz, Sr. Mr. William R. Lilliott, II Mrs. John J. Lynch The Lucas Family Mrs. Philip Anthony Lyons Mr. 8: Mrs. John F. McCusker Mr. 8: Mrs. W. J. McDonald, Jr. Mr. John J. McLaughlin Mr. 8: Mrs. joseph P. Maldonis Mr. 8: Mrs. Bernard P. Maloney Dr. 8: Mrs. William E. Manz Mr. 8: Mrs. William A. Massey Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank Meduski Mr. 8: Mrs. Lawrence F. Meehan Mrs. James Stephen Missett Mr. 8: Mrs. john J. Moran Mr. 8: Mrs. M. J. Moroney Mr. 8: Mrs. Daniel J. Mulhern Mr. 8: Mrs. james G. Nagle Hon. 8: Mrs. James F. Nangle Mr. 8: Mrs. Thomas P. O'Boyle Mr. 8: Mrs. Henry J. O'Brien Mr. 8: Mrs. Edward J. O'Connell Mr. 8: Mrs. A. R. Orlandella Mrs. Charles L. Peltier Mrs. Robert I. Peters Mr. 8: Mrs. William Phalan Mr. 8: Mrs. C. W. Pope Mr. 8: Mrs. Anthony V. Proto, Sr Mr. 8: Mrs. james P. Reynolds The Sayer Family Mr. Philip L. Sbarbaro Mr. 8: Mrs. Charles F. Scanlon Mr. 8: Mrs. F. Russell Schneider Mr. 8: Mrs. John T. Schriver Mr. 8: Mrs. James V. Sciaraffa Mr. Antone Silva Mr. 8: Mrs. E. G. Smith Mr. Charles E. Smith Mr. 8: Mrs. Mortimer F. Smith Mr. 8: Mrs. james S. Soldani Mr. 8: Mrs. Edward L. Spitznagel Mr. 8: Mrs. Sydney Steele Mr. 8: Mrs. Andrew Ticchi Mr. 8: Mrs. Leo Tully Mr. 8: Mrs. David A. Varnerin Mr. 8: Mrs. joseph M. Venus Mr. Roger F. Waindle Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank J. Ward Mr. 8: Mrs. Clair Weaver Mr. 8: Mrs. Ralph Willard Mr. 8: Mrs. James C. Winn Compliments Howe 8 whiffley of Lumber Company 'I00 Southbridge Street Ruclnlck and Meagher AUBURN, MASS. Worcester Boston 757-3847 COMPLIMENTS OF GRANGER coNrRAcnNe co. Best of Luck! MURRAY YANOVER 9-20 MOTEL YANOVER DRIVE-IN Junction Routes 9 84 20 278 Millbury Street PAUL E. P. BURNS CO., INC. Academic Caps, Gowns, and Hoods Choir Robes Judicial Robes 316 Summer Street BOSTON 10, MASSACHUSETTS LI 2-1513 Have YOU Adequate Protection? Our entire organization is at your service at all times to help you plan for ADEQUATE protection against f1re and the possible re- sulting loss of life. RENEK BROTHERS, INC. AMERICAN 29 Tronbridge Road COMPANY WORCESTER' MASS' Established I90O Telephone 755-4438 Sales and service of all types of . . . FIRE EXTINGUISHERS FIRE HOSE PORTABLE FIRE ESCAPES 399 Great Plain Avenue Needham, Mass. 449-I3l0 COMPUMENTS OF - - - Kesseli 81 Morse Company WASHINGTON PRESS OF WORCESTER, INC. IIO West Boylston Drive WORCESTER 6, MASS. BUILDERS AND MASONS SUPPLIES TILE AND FLOOR COVERING INSTALLATIONS TRANSIT MIXED CONCRETE 242 Canterbury Worcester 3, Mass ART ANDREOLI '58 Your Guardian Agent Art has been of service to many of the graduates of Holy Cross in setting up their insurance programs. Now and in the future call or write to Art. He will assist you and your families with all of your needs for lite, health coverage, pension plans and group insurance. Joseph W. Norton, C.L.U. '31 Manager The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America 7254726 Commerce Bldg. Worcester, Mass. PL 3-8195 Arthur Chair Renting FOLDING CHAIRS AND TABLES 179 Shrewsbury St. WORCESTER, MASS. Telephone 754-5400 - 752-1674 COMPLIMENTS OF LEO'S RESTAURANT Specializing in Real Italian Food and Pizza Full Liquor License LEO J. TURO, Prop. 56 Shrewsbury Street WORCESTER, MASS. Worcester Bus Company 287 Grove Street WORCESTER, MASS. DENHOLM 81 MCKAY'S Department Store Worcester's Largest Department Store 484 Main Street Worcester, Mass. S. S. PHOTO SUPPLY 34 Franklin Street Worcester, Mass. Rosenluncl Travel Service Call Early for Reservations 306 Main Street Worcester, Mass. Area Code: 617, 754-7236 FLOWERLAND, INC. Chandler at Main Street Worcester, Mass. Ostrow Electric Company 9 Mason Street Worcester, Mass. i-I JWJ N D LINEN SUPFLY COHINC. ONS Everything in Travel Rail-Steamship-Airlines Raymond J. MacKouI Produce Co. Purveyors of Quality Fruit and Produce 132 Southbridge Street 36 Elm Etreet PL 6-4691 W t M orces er, ass. PLEASANT VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB NATIONALLY FAMOUS -:- PRESTIGE SETTING Q CHARMING DECOR Q DELIGHTFUL DINING Q PERFECT SERVICE Ten Minutes from Mount St. James Route 146 Sutton, Mass. Worcester-Providence Turnpike Reservations: Motor Lodge 865-5222 Country Club 865-4441 Best of Luck to the Men of '67 LEO'S BARBER SHOP 666 Southbridge Street Worcester Oxy-Acetylene Wofcwef. Mw- Supply Company 1000 Southbridge St. worzcesren Modern Sanitary Up-to-Date TWO BARBERS SHAMPOO'S MASSAGES SUN LAMP P 1- 4' Nr ,,...-..-v-v Q-' ,,' .uv--3' 4-19 r 'ay T131 Compliments of FRANCH' BR05- CENTRAL suPPLY coMPANY 81 39-41 Woldo Street Worcester Moss. 258 Shrewsbury St. Worcester E! 955 if ' W3 euuusgwi l.lTTI.EFIEI.D, FLORIST Compnmenfs of 552 Main Sfreef NATIONAL GLASS WORKS Worcester, Moss. 372 Pork Ave. FLOWERS WIRED ANYWHERE . . . Worcester, Mass. Wholesale Distributor Electrical Supplies Lighting Equipment A. C. BOWLER CO. 69 Green Street Worcester, Mass. GEORGE F. BLAKE, INC. STEEL-ALUMINUM METALS-INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES 70 Quinsigamond Avenue Worcester SULLIVAN D. C. 8. CO., INC. Specialists in Industrial Security Undercover Operators-Guards 24 HOUR SERVICE Since l858-Known the Nation Over as Worcester's Finest Restaurant Banquets-From 4-400 People FREE PARKING CHARLES K. DAVIS-President JOHN K. DAVIS-Treasurer JAMES K. DAVIS-General Manager PUTNAM 81 THURSTON'S RESTAURANT 89 State Street CApitol 7-0349 BOSTON, MASS. I9-27 MECHANIC STREET WORCESTER PL 3-5427 coMPuMENrs or West Side Union Laundry, Inc. 48 Mason Street Worcester RADIO STATION WTAG WORCESTER TELEGRAM THE EVENING GAZETTE SUNDAY TELEGRAM CONGRATULATIONS, CLASS OF '67 HERTZ RENT-A-CAR 30 Myrtle Street MINICOST CAR RENTALS No Lower Rates in Massachusetts 791-8121 28 Portland Street Worcester . BEST WISHES FROM Worcester Federal Savings and Loan Association RAYMOND P. HAROLD President HOME OFFICE SPRINGFIELD OFFICE 22 Elm Street Main and Sanford Worcester, Mass. Springfield, Mass. FRANK AN D CHARLES CALLAHAN coMPuMENrS or . . . Industrial Suppliers of Worcester 212 Summer Street Worcester, Mass. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Crusocler Council No. 2706 Holy Cross College WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS A K lx I GRAND KNIGHT-JOSEPH J. NEIDENBACH 2 DEPUTY GRAND KNIGHT-JOHN J. CROWLEY 3 CHANCELLOR-ROBERT M. CORRENTI 4 WARDEN-FRANCIS J. WARD 5 TREASURER-RICHARD L. BOVE 6 RECORDING SECRETARY-HAROLD G. CLARKE 7 ADVOCATE-ROBERT C. O'KEEFE 8 LECTURER-GEORGE E. BETTINGER 9 OUTSIDE GUARD-JOHN E. CAVICCHI I0 INSIDE GUARDS-ROBERT J. HOWARD and EDWARD L. BARTLETT, JR. NLV-L INVESTMENTS Hanrahan 84 Co., Inc. 332 Main Street Worcester, Mass. PI 3-4741 BEST WISHES FROM . . COMPLIMENTS OF . . LEE'S MILK Rex Paper Box Company Inc. 55 Harlow Street Worcester, Mass. Braintree, Mass. SERVING HOLY CROSS . . FOR AN AFTER-THE-GAME SPECIALTY TRY TI IE TWO-WAY RADIO 24 HOUR SERVICE RESTAURANT SEVEN HILLS PLAZA H , , , , Specialuzmg In Real Italnan Pnzza and Spaghettu PI. 6-5184 . . . FuII Llcense Pnvlleges Arrow Cab Associates of Worcester PASQUALE BISCEGLIA. Prop. l22 Shrewsbury Street Worcester, Mass BEST CF LUCK l68 '69 4 '1o RY BEST WISHES BOOKSTORE YANKEE DRUMMER INN AND MOTOR HOUSE EARLY AMERICAN FOOD DRINK AND LODGING O E D J. G. LAMOTTE 81 SON, INC. HEATING College, School and Camp Department Engineers and Contractors WCRCESTER BOSTON .ICHN C. PAIGE AND CQMPANY Compliments of 40 Broacl Street-Boston TOM CONRCY'S BIRCH ROQM 30 Bartlett Street Z 5 Amfsfzffs mffvnfw Wnffzs MACHIIVF 1001.9 f9!f!M67019!! 6' BEHF?-IVIANNING DIM . ' Troy, N. K 6' 0646 ' ' A 5 , Preggre-Szzszxlie fapes THE NAHONAL RESEARCH C6912 Cambrld e. Mass. . . .A ND L Vacuum fZlJOMEOf - fanfalum Research and Jevelapmenf E25 PA NDIN G CLIPPER MANUFACTURING CO. ,ef.! Kansas C7fy, Missouri XMJSODW ana' Ioncfefe Jufffhg Fqujomenf NCFPTON COIWPANY Cm GENERAL OFFICES - VVOPCESTEP, MASS., U. S. A. FITZPATRICK BROTHERS INC CATERERS SINCE 'l92O Compliments Catering for Every Occasion of WEDDINGS ' RECEPTIONS ' BANQUETS BUFFETS ' BREAKFASTS ' SOCIALS ATLANTIC Union Caterers AVIATICN 322-6520 Worcester Municipal Airport 342 Pearl Street Malden you should be made to wear earphones - W C H C You'lI NOTIS the DiFFerence DIAL EXT. 2488 for NQTIS PIZZA For the Finest of Foods CHARLES RESTAURANT 96 MILLBURY STREET ag, l 'N BEST WISHES 9 ,-2 ds-Q, V 1'x, 1.1 2 X ,,.- .ji 'f. ,, , ' ...If .ig-S -... +f:.,..-VJ, af - -, 5-,Y . '-eil., in , . , ,, 'V N ' W 2- TUDENT GCVERNMENT . .E - , Served A All Coll 'yglar Ev C P. f EJ s ,I FRlfEN D 'EW PM X , - 1 Best Wishes From .... DAVID L. EGGERS U E' 7 iff '2 'f t ff' W ii I 'X is QW.. 5 Y Z-ja. Volume LIX of the Holy Cross Purple Patcber has been printed by the offset lithographic process on Champion 80 lb. Templar Dull Coated Enamel by Foote 81 Davies of Doraville, Georgia. The covers of both volumes and the slip-case were pro- vided by the Kingsport Press of Kingsport, Ten- nessee. The College seal is embossed in gold metal applique. Volume I is set in 10 pt. Garamond Italic. The main heads of Volume II are set in 50 pt. Garamond Bold and the body copy is set in 10 pt. Gararnond No. 3. The senior portraits are by the Warren Kay Vantine Studio of Boston, Massachusetts. The Biography of the Class of 1967 was written by Phil Smith. The copy appearing in Volume I was under the co-authorship of Chris Kenney and Mike Hart. Photos on pages 10 and 14 of Volume I are through the courtesy of Mr. Mort Goldfader. The Purple Patcher Volume LIX, 1967 College of the Holy Cross Worcester, Massachusetts Gene Sisco, Eclitor Bill Blum, Burineff Manager Editorial Board: Managing, Mike Hart, Photography, Lester York, Sporty, Topher Bill, Seniors, Dan Harrigan, Copy, Bill McCarthy, Activities, Tom Osgood and Bob White, Academics, John Robbert, Untlergraaluatef, Ed Finnegan. Photographers: Lennie Leaman, Gene Coskren, Brian Heller, Joe McGrath, Gus Caffrey, Ron Frigon, Bob Pascucci. Copy and Layout: Chris Kenney, Phil Smith, Jim Casey, Walt Guertin, Steve Karpiak, john Murphy, John Bentley. Business Staff : Accountant, Frank McGuire, Circulation, Ralph Pack- ard, Patronf, Greg Freeman, Ailrfertifernentr, Bob Bradbury. The picture on page 80 of Volume I is the work of Carl Schmitt. This edition of the Purple Patcber could not be complete without a note of appreciation to Mr. Richard Vantine and Mr. Thomas Leonard of Van- tine Studios, to lVLr. Charles Kolak of the Public Relations Department, and especially to Mr. William Sloane of Foote and Davies, with whom we have had the rare privilege to work. The 1967 Purple Patcher has been, We hope, a unique attempt in yearbooks for the College of the Holy Cross. Volume II has presented the more formal aspects of the College: a sampling of faculty and administration, organizations, sports, undergraduates, and seniors. Volume I has attempted to capture, in a l.opefully memorable manner, the impact that this year and, more generally, our four years at Holy Cross have had upon us and all who experience it. 240 'pf f 'H ' 5 v Y f,.'fL9'e7S' 'bfi' vw:-L if ' bi Q'i1 '-L-NlNf! .'.'f5 'ww' - 'REX IQ .Ae '-ff '1TT.4'F?i'11' si '5f fviL H E f 'wx ' G1f '!1'm xP1'q ' '?0 'X' '-- 'ff 'Y WW x'K'-'ffl'-+2332vf'f:.iw4, ,'5 SWK ,,1 ' 1 Aff. nip' ' 1, .. . ,M , .L r Fai ,T+,QW5f,L'if,S.N,.fx2i55'3fii?TS,Rx' Q45 iqix-I g,,1.', .,gg.5 -- 1 ,Qx-x, -5,-3-J, -, -, -NN. A--. J,.,,Y 4 .ff f-lc, ' T ' '. 'jfs , . , . s .V Q , 1- Y SK , L! xv qt., 21'23TQiXJ-,A zgvfjwlgkrlfxii . .QL if N. if-:D 'f bJ. f3T2E?',q:1 f ' ....i,'u,W-fb sjfgtiwlg px ID- W, bg ....A..f. 5... .. fr -.XAJ --Yi?-T Q- --NS 'ww mv. Ax. -x...v .T ,. f--.Y MA ' X x 6 GN SQ 1 ' -. 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H1 1'-zfc, Mfg,-, x. , , - ul wif' W,i141?' f5'f3+ Tempting and doubly costly beginnings become. Spare, elemental, cosmic, some might say. A stub- ble of time never revealed venerable full flowing growth. Not then, not now, not then . . . Yet it grows. Words elbow in to say what just one word could say and people are beginning to come in round numbers again. Restless and urgent, awk- ward and cautious. As the first ray, the first bud . . . You'ue heard it all before. So mark it on the dust cover, just inside, a name, a class, a time . . . a man. .u X -49,1 ,,v.,.. ri ,,,,.,,.,,,-........-vw' M . J mu .W4 . . f X Clogged with unneeded clothing, leathery .ruitcafef hump together intimately on the pavement. New namey, peremptory inxtructionf, the flaxh-hulh re- collection of a family crowded in a tintype frame huxtley in the mind. Ex- pectant, apprehenfiue, hraue. Up ahead Wheeler muxt he Jcaled while the curiouf tree if paffed up for the anxwer to quextionf, the need for new friendf. The Jurge, the difcovery if hetter left alone for now. No time to anew value, to calculate refultf. Too early, too Joon. I wonder whore fheetf they horrowed to make thofe signf? L ,5-.X dqg' 5 Ex . , wwf' , . . L-5' N qw. qi-3 ' . S-, , .m,,, s,., , ' x x .fb x .sy , , Q , 2 , V- - i. 'Tiff Somewhere ont there the eternal npperclanman refidef. At peace with a world which haf come to expect him to learn the haficf and play the reft hy ear, he can make the fan Jhine at night, the all-occafion man, who haf mattered the art of how to. Only he can appreciate flipping a Janory Jammer experience into a friendly converyation and then waiting for the delicioztf .fecondf of caorital awe to tick off. Name dropping if heneath him. The proper rue! of cologne are a matter of tafte. Eafe apparently with Jztcceu, Jitccen apparently with ejort . . . Bat for few if college eternal. 2 'l 4- , DRUGS tl SHAVWHG I The rules of the game are suhject to change hut everyone can play. Before they reach the tahles, everybody antes up. Then the dealer passes you your cards. When the kihhitzing hegan someone in the corner said he had to ace this one. This time johers are wild. Five cards,' a possible straight. A reshujfle. One fellow could have gone for a full house hut he said it would keep him up all night. From the tahle along the side wall a man with a cigar sent a message to someone. He wants to see him in his hack office. Too late, he's folded. Everyone at the tahle agreed he really had guts. -.-, . . ,N vv ..,. .- 0 f 1 In V .-vp. r' Ffa-1 Ai, ,sl I 4 ,1 '-.JAH 'Ub,,,.. Lg..- 'W' 1 ., . : a- , - ' ' vi ,r- r . T' -: - M ' I ',A A 1-F. -.. ...- ', ... p-.Q My--vfijv, Pig. 5 1 'ft ar ' 'f 0 -'-4 ,... f A - ' 1 ,, hi. +1 '?Asf.,, --Q.. f Q YH I Round white cliycy .rhine ahove zu. We need only :ee our ftature, ourfelvef on a frozen Jea, againyt their Jtrength. From outficle, the light we have corne to accept Jhowf zz: .rhadowf mocking a yuh- Jtance we .fometzrney cannot fee. From within, Jhaclowf receale hefore the power and peace of a true light. To carry light hack into the cave-like Jhaalowf of ourfeloef and othery, we pray. .wr .,v- 1 - V-, ., :6,,gq,f-x 1. 1 uf.--g .3 fe ij, .Ve . .A ',-.149 5. ,. 3-ms .52 3 l .1055 7: if left 9521 iff, ,ff fe ff., .-, f. --l',-'LU ' Q: - 1-- f Y 'Z -- Y .. .r , ., V- ' J. -,g.A- 'aft' ,J .Nm-717 5 e---..3,94,'jMYr'-' 7 q:',.3 '45,- w- gs, -fe Q34 va '- az., e 4 -' fc -f--f - aff., 7 -R ., 14 margin.. ,,.,, ,dag ,lr , .t ,eg --3 ,,-J: :Q-1f,:f,'1.,-.QF M -: 'Q . A - Q -uA,:,,-ff: ., x zz' 5 fig-A-in jf x ' x 'f' --I Tv'-'FSHSQ i 7417 ,bil-' T-ng? :ia -X-5 T if Saucy .fummer turn: vugrant and Jlizjfi on coolly, like iz gueft wbo but over- .rtayed ber welcome- alivayf about to leave but never quite getting around to it. Harlequin autumn mufquertulef. Her Jmolclering leuvef give ojj' an in- cenfe, bring on iz fever. We must leeep moving left in puufing ive ure tempted to beboltl Meilusu-winter and ure frozen in Jerenity. 1:5 j - 1, ,Y P 3 1' Y , .f Q, if gms .Jr V56 -f. J 2,545.5 ,gil I A ig-3Y'?6'.,!1-' f' 421' -' s -3 ' - 3' fgfwgf f1i 'JS' 1, 'f ff ef? , nf X Vis? X -iv F I- ' F'- F FU F!! ? ' El' ,,m,, :-1' 1. ...3 . , ag, . 5,1r': 1 if Staccato cacophony . . . go, go, go,' precision of a well-timed play, endless percussion of shoulder against arm, cocked wrist, raised eyes, hands extend- ed, fingers clutching, the final ten, nine, eight . . . adrenalin enough for all. What alchemy is this? What mixture of mud spattered uniforms, seconds ticking ojj' on a flashing scoreboard, the inevitable blonde in the front row, or a lost Crusader with the incongruous aluminum helmet? I 5M4s1 Q A Af? , .. ,f ' -1., an . 'www' l?'tEfi:v .A Y I 'v Ii lu.. if-'g L- V? -Q lx Lk -I. 'v All fx QSM' f Q VEC 'FY' 355-,an .inf I 'x ,...-.N -in-X Buried deep in Fall amid a cascade of fhiny umbrellas, lodged heneath a hoohy hat dejiance ftalhf. Hold that line, no longer a Juggettion, a plea has hecome a com- mand legiylated, a solemn ulease. Every move if Jur- fueyed with hawk eyex, calculated with the ypeedy com- putation of a Jtoch hroher. When they leave the Jtandx, they drop exhaufted into each othefy army. Theiry way the battle, their.: the victory. But after . . . Kind heart: to their heartr' content Jpill ooer in quiet eafe. Converfation clinhf intimately like cocktail glar- Jey in the next room. Between, among, with . . . I care, you care . . . The grammar of worclleu motion of mu- tual joy, fun, love. Paifley pantf, Tiffany glam, pop art chinof, thump, throh, patter. Throw it all in a :haher of platinum, or a clixie cup and let it froth. 'niuersity of Vi A M E R S E A cllll T F .iii 1,211 Y 1 ,Q an gmggjnylvia suumw, ocmmsn 2, 1966 0 l T ' Hou moss Flamuouss 11.30 P M, --H10 PIL I HM LIN IQJXEELSI Tldidi 3V3Vl.zlv1 xl Hwlx Kmss A. A. - UT ll Ihr lk' ., .. . Col-pug SG , , , AN-ll NNN Nik'--July 3 Aurusll Y, '- N-N.. NN. Stialentx are with teacher: as they are with cup! of cojfee. Some will drain them of quickly, othem will ulp and .rome othen never jinifh theim. But all hegan one time. Theatrical tears, mefh reality in a collage of myth and emotion, tainted paftel half-note: hriuhecl gently axicle. Talent and expreuion hack to hack. Very perxonal rever- ie: into the third circle of imagination plnchecl ont of a mind. To grope hachytage, to fqiteeze oat the laxt :part of energy, to create, to leave hehincl fome thing of onrfelvey. . A 1, il They my zbat Alexander wept became be had no more world: to conquer 91-YY, V Eff' ' 1 V. .-.1--Av ,, 4 J ef., ff f'4 wiwf' 2 x ! I 459, 5f M-,Q . '53 rQilSf'f -52:-'fr M M - 51, r' iz, ,, , 'kb' I ' 'V ,' . , if , guy- , .f , ..'qi3'.J'i. ' sg f sa, - fm . 4, ww . ' 1.4 i. ' ,- , , J rf .P QW! QI - .7 I ' n 1' . I :'1.714t ', , A . 4f?',fbAL:4,xf.zA.k ' .Aj 1 . 94: 1 ,,f '7f nf., '-4 - Late Fall, cold, damp, miserable. This is the final game, the weight of tradition hangs like an amfil above our heads. The apparent golden triumphs of the past season will be struck into fool's gold lest today's game balances our account with B. C. Three and one half minutes of glory into the game sets the score at 19-0. The foe is vanquished. Somehow the pieces come apart. Suddenly it's 20-19 and . . . halftime of dampness, cold hot dogs, stale popcorn. Uneasily the maddening irony and frustration possesses us all. Then 25-20. Again the knot unravels. It's 26-25. The empty pit of a last chance lost seems to wait before us. Finalby, in a last tailspin of crashing fortune we level off, we soar, we triumph. An effort beyond bewildered hope hidden in a scrambling pass. A two step lead, the bomb . . . 32-26. We beat B. C. ndffn wU'9b94 i'iTf7VF' ' Vx ' x if ,- JZ 'V,'V f ,-A, - .-,gfJ?w'?.,i.11- X -wg 5.5 A ,w3?1?'f AM V.,q.,N,, -'gy-w,wittg, K X 5' if K 734'ggf,, . L' J' 'is if , ' S? I- wg-X'-'1122?5'ff42 if ' .,. K, X ' f 'L-51, ijt?-Y: Q' , A 5. -735, Q W. f,,,,,,, ,.,AMy V Hg, v , K 5 fx jf' listing Arg. A tt 'M fm , A we ftrw,-aff. : wjtm.-, x , .N ,V,.,,.,,,,V More than we expectg never as mnch af we need. Fall is 4 dillybag of memoriefg into it pbilandering :nmmer difcard: random leftoneng from it tfoiening winter pilfen time. Then the fanny-face of time tzirny like a petrijied weather- coch at the .flap of chafpping windy. Bechoneal high from northern Jhiex hy ftnhhy-fingered cloudy, irraxcihle Wag- nerian hornhaft .fwaggerf in. More than we want,' never too early to Jtop. Wg? 'Ai' 1'-Yy 'L' 9, ' X -Q.f ,'.BU Ty 4-1'-'-1.-1-J 1 .- ,..J Nj . x K Hg- . ki-,,. :as ' - 31+ Af .,- J. 5 :MLP 'X' A'-'femwf - ef. 'J-,fs YQ, , ,VV -X ' 2, gilt- - Ylx ' ' . .3-v. H . - . L. ' 'RQ' ' L. -1 . N. 5 .,. w . - 4. 'X A.. .wt - -z as-u xg 1 5-I 1 'KN .. -QI 5 A - N f fl' 'H fp. 7 ggi-CU 4,- ,,,-i1 .g . O xx . it .. . PY ' 5 'iw Nr' K 3' ' . A S 11 u L S S 'R 5 5 44 S1 J . O Y' 'fi -9 fx x Y . i' Q X v in ,a- 5 gtk.. M- .1. ' '.-1,-.---.: . V ::.Q.,f:3':w-v i 2135. - Q, ,, K If7T:4lm1:.v.'A .fQ'+T5Q'Kw15 1 , ew-r.-an , V h., x .. :gy .g:.4'n-half .. .-2359 ,Q-sr S-QM? M au wwf- 'ia ' g4.:1Qf?f:1fw:zg 4-:Su-s2'ffa'S'L f ff1f.15'35i -13. 'Siivi . :.f: iff-N1 tLLfx,T A ' M .B gf Nr' 'ft' .avi 1 ,N s. iw' .. s-Q '5'5v ' life -5,355 5, - L xi ,im J ' - : .,.'.q. -. , P ' Nififfl-3 .f 7,:5i,g1-U 'gL1f:.,. If-'-1:':f-V Q: T .-.f - .- .. - t' fig-,Q-' i'?zf:9 'Q?g'f,'if A' 'iQ,?T1i? -5' --xr: - ,.gi-,wm',Fi2--' mf- j yy 1 Q- 1 '. . ., N I U if ,,,k.?,i'? ,w,g,:.,,aYf. JNL YV, 4 PR , .9 'big Of cameo and the fragility of fine hone china, of the cracked imperyonality of a fhattered mirror winter ha.r equal poffeffion. Under a :zthdned and rheitmy mn hleached danzaycene drape! Jliding hilly in ruffled lace or pleated wool-Jcitjfed, Jcattered, caught up in a new maelftronz of design. X g 3-NX ,H -5-Yagi . Q.,-4:4 x 4 . a .Sy : M - . , 4. , K . A ' .nfs . g 'ali . 1 1414 X 'A -F . ' A, W' u..,,,v in H -1 Q' Q S f ,po-tb 54 nv ...gk we .mu A , H-Q x Hgh -V-. an-W A I aa 2 'fy , '-ir ' ' . . N ,- :, 3 ' K ,s. I '5-bn , Wd . ,. , - ,gh -..L . -- V 1 : A 5, ' . . l .sf r' Q -- - g., - X -.ce -. 1 y :Fr 1 l -1, H A 'L . , Ai' 31.1 ., - ss. I A ' . 4, . ,, ' - I Qy - s. V A' ...pm- 'ws '. :it , Q.. 's , - ' - - ,M-4 . l A ' ,, 1 A' A . 'W ' 40 we , sa 1- I I .lx I' 1 ' ' - 9 ., K 'rms- and naw. .aff 'A 'gift' Af' M We fi? 'er 3 M., ' .fwqfv fag S vis I 'W' 'J .4 'k .3-49' '50 Snow ubiquitous, Jnow unolerfoot, Snow of the ode, the cafrol, the Eykimog Flujjly, floating mow incorrigible, Home for the snowman abominable. In creoicey, crannief and wacky, Snow for Snoopy lying in state, For buxkiey, for Jlalom, For falling anal flipping. Snow to be cursed, blefsed, anal pileilg Snow clown the back, on the tongue . . irrational, national-Jnow. A5 Q ,, tg I 23' , , P' 1 3 .Q 1 25 11, C f f . 7 Q 5 5, 5' ,' ' ,, ' e f g A t if , .55 '- 'f ff' lf A ff .f::Qf Y l ,l ff' ,N 1:-v A. 'C 1 :A ' xffzt .1 x wp V In A '- . 1' i .5 ra gr .. . 1 lift, 3 5 A e',g90,,.-4 ,x N. ' , V, ,,,.. .,-v- ' . f .,. ....4.., . L -.,4-v 4- M . 'V ....,... R , Q . .AL x ' 1 1 .b ,if if -l gf! ff , 5' . . all '- 'zkl ' ' ,gqilili U . ,x A -.1 13 g. ke l : x' 'Q 'V j I - gg 'i5f,7:i f7'? 'W7'77 3' 186 lining' J. .... -J, X' zsifg-1222 l ,fa o,fp,'afff 4 f e-fee-2-ff ' , 'ifbfigigjtfijff in -Q'1QJ Q , A V I' :1-35.3. Q. if f ', .y,154w'.f . :tui:.' I , IW E-2-2:-'?:..':. ia- 9594! -..,,-ff:-. -3. I nfl r::::.:::-.:.-f 1 v'91,Lf'. -- ' IGI-E-2-rigs' H u-' ,J-in X! U -.. f . 1 1 01313 iiigg-. - llltbql 1 -'MQIIQ lining 1llSi 'lingua' H1 Q- ' In-nnn:..Q' ' A ilili-- lliilljg iClHilQ .Illini lliiiwn llilihls-fn iuiqiuu timing' iniling -Hlhli tsilqenf. .,, lClllI-lui!! 'Q itil:-:lull lnnnaixauu llfp iul1uu-mmf sqiuiuinnleg' 1uiv-11.510 4 ngiuiuunn - .1 -3 5 : I 1 I il Q 19' I fn . nl , -vflj' af' l l'1F'll 4' aft' nl' Ifglf ,v-'fi'3fk'f571'57?5'?51' :A',j.'r:Zi.-'f,f.--f,sf1'a'a?qa'l'-:.:.'!1f:-1 :asks-1'fM'a1'.2'-2-aff-af-'1 f-af-.afLf-2-.2f'f,'2.'.-.w1Y'-.:-'f-'i .'f-E.'a1'1 T:':1 U Q 4 Q Q! H Q If '.uf+agf,'11g31sZ1a?-2-1.15-1'--v'1 r ' 1 , L. ' '15 599' A?-i'112-',p57',:.v?: 7?'S7':'?5'-1-.jd Lliualtil Q1 gflf -- llllSd0?ls,gf'.j91r ll .ggdl- seas-2:1-2-3'a:a'f'-f ' 2-Zi'Ei-E'F 5 ' mil? IC--alil 3-Ei-as-s-'.'-5 325175235 ' raL'r.'aE::-1,1-E f'5'1'1.-E .:.'r-E-2 li- llilqn 101' ,ng 331-1 Q fpili' , hglli-i gd' :'... '1'-- -,,,--: alvl ' .:u plilvf' .iss-l ':'9 ha ol- . 'nal' ' uc' In :5'L'3-2.? ' 'H I 1'1'?a':'f1E'T1' tag? 'lllk-.I l ., ' '-FW' ' f W 5f'ffif'f:f'f'75'r,3p f'ff5'a5 ' ' - -'ifffiv 5'-i'f4Jf'.f,1f 51'4' bf4i'?Jf.9':7'7f?5Jv'fi ' 35415955 ffiyf- :ff ' ' 13052, 225544-?2sf f ' fl ' pffffb' Af' If If ff ,-G It if hy pare choice, of conrfe, that man choofey to Jpend the greater part of winter indoorfg indoor: where heartx are trnmpx and hall Jexyionx rage. Somewhere downtown nnder hlanketf of grey .fmoke two glasfef chime. On campus a hand reachey ont from the darhneyy and flick: reality from a :oap commercial to a horror chow. T. Emil' Hibermztion ix part of the imtinctzml drive of animalxg it if only by pure choice that man decidey to Jpemi the winter indoory, of cozmfe . . . X ti ti '35 Z N,-r 2134-f' N 1 xvfj, thingy , ,.f,..-....: ,. 1, 1 ',,? ,-mJQzgW?fi 1g, Rf. ! f . J 'i , if .f X pl' S -rf .. Ama xii if an ahhrezfiation for aj a place to .fit and watch other people .fitting and watching, hj a roorn where you can hear Znnch-room theologicianx, hoafting cafanovaf, hnciding Zeftifty, and Caf rat.r ciifcnff the impor- tance of Polynefian Frog Worxhip, cj an enarneleci charnher clefigneaf hy the archi- tect of Maafifon Square Garafen'J waxhroorm, dj all or none or some or any of thefe. r ' i r Y w t D mmf 2,3 Q Aw .L V , :- i' ?s,,.? H' 5 , ,ix Tw QQ? En 1 - f -,,.. ' '43 152. E 0, N ,aa h -, . 1 w - , K Q . , , N 1 V, 4 S Y ,Q ' W 5? 1 52 zz wr f Q Q' S , '?!'f?? -K I 1, , x, ' 1 .W T f x 1 'S w ' ' '34 A 67 WWA i' :xw ' ' . 'S ff I S I ' lil 5 iz 5 w?ytn'i5,I A a I ,K Q ., -WE 1. I 6 5 3 5 5 XL-, V ' . - .4 ,LA A U 'GRN 'H Q 22 , .1 X ,.? . 23. ,mf .TV I 4472 1' I' .. nf i 5 ,j Q. , .3 Q3 Q ...4? ' v' ha' 3 -. - . 2 .f . . Q. . -, -5 W X - W f ff- : 7 '93, ' f?'-if b A . Q if - Q-fa Y' .- ' fzif- ' nr' -ff .-'E 'A' 4 A -L2-nf fn , A A. . 'iam -A 5 6 giP4?i. 2 :liz-i ' V ' 3' 7- ji' ,Q j if. A s -. A . AG ' 9 4. f'f N., N 1 145 . 1.5 4 x Q 1 5-yu .4 fl Pug J I' - QL W -4 'W 'Y 3 .,, .., rf-- .. .....:-w- . ..,-. iam ' w. 1'-'QQ ,, ' 4 Nw xy He -Zin. : '::.:.1?spz.ms- .' .. .Nw ..-W ..,..--. ll' L ..- 'Jn -an Through the evening houry the age-old cuxtom of cramming if practiced: the cult of exam taking hecomef a ritual, for when the .run rife! they mutt meet the challenge, A jift gripf the ftomach: they concoct potionx of nicotine and caffeine. Who hnowf what quextion lurkf? How can they meet thiy text? Pujing, drinking. Jtudying. pzfjirtg . . . the night foldf into day. Up from the defht they move Jlowly, careful not to hump against anything lest the intricate halance of knowledge he upyet. Before they know it the te5t'5 over. The canclidatef .rtare hlankly. moving oifer the ground af in trance. The ordeal if ended, the initiation complete. Reward: .foft .vleep hour after hour after . . . , 1 4 1 3 I nil? :X f V: f . 0.1 ' on G x Vi, fl,-, U 1 5 Q 'L a I 'D I 5' - New .,,11r'4!'f'f' pfyll' X . ,.,--V ,, I -4. Lauderdale, New York D C Bermuda, 'Wars a K t ,I , if JK- A 'A' -nl -W., - ':-uu.! ' '- ill , 5. 1 10 ' 0 H ' 1 4 'v a,W, H A sq' 5 1 -.- -1 4 'a 4 5- A A - 2 FMA L.dD f ix T 4' 'lv .Q.-Y,,. , ,A I' uv ups- 1 Q iv ,ka-0 .Hg 5 I hr .1- sr If .Ml -4.5 AJ I was Jayiug, the Min Worcexter . . Butter clown if really a great place. The hamhurgery there . . . Hey, that'.r one and a half glaffef of milk, buddy are a little, well you know, greaxy, you might Jay, hut . . . Does auyhocly want more rollx? they're hig anal tafte really . . . Miss wonczsrsn D IN ER - he -2' -W ff- if -fy -Q ef that lt ' 'wr-7 r....g 'i .. , ... ., -e -P -4..4'f'- .qgy 2' ,. fr. -' - . , . -- . -aw-fANe..sw-df:-A., 1, ,y , , . . I .' -A -MX - -- , 1- ' Q - '. . L 'QU' ,X 3 , - rug V V' - A - ,. Y .. ., ., .,:4,,,-' Q , .X , K ' i ,. wk 'f .-., ...W-H ' ,--,,,,,, f Y .A ' , ' gp., FQ , nh-...W-'. 'I H., A' wwf -.. , W., -- rf 4 .--..-. -'H ' .. , - - v--- F ' 'P -- - - -. 2- - -- .. -- -- -. ,X , . , gf. H 1,1-:A - - f- -W - G., . . ., -xr-' we - A, . f . - -.-'P'-f' 5 w -M , . , Q .1 , -4 - - - -' -,Q ' - --4 v - , , . f- q... . 4-I4 -1- vy , ,L , A..Q.f... . 6 JM Jim. me-. , . 1 Ai --4 ml M2 Igtx av J A Q, , , . nz. Mr, W, h Y h x , .M K F N... '...' .. ' ' 1 Q ' R., -5 42713111 , . , . A .vfai-.1 ,, f - '20-:z,,:,-.e , , - '- ' - '-1 'rw - if ti, he it Lf ' T , . . 1 -5 L- f ,.,, v .S s 3 5 , g gw -Q -in , 3, iw- 4- ww- ' 3 5m..m2- Y 5 Q 3 ' - w:mL..2n ' 2 A 2- 2 x ' - i js 9, x,p,,wW.,sx 'J . ,qi ,ga V , 45: ea A 3 2 Q. 945 gf v U fx Rapid, driving, rbytbmic, tbe fax! break layup, rusbing, roaring, a jump Jbot, .vufpended in air. Slraining motion eafed alone by tbe dribble, dribble, .rwixb of a foul .rbot . . . Tbe face of zfbe crowd worried, matching zfbe anxiety of tbe playery. Witb velocity, Jweat, proweu, a Jporz of quick impulfe. if ,, ff' 'V' fax S 1 .nf 1 far . bw sf! Turned on Dug in. Spun out. ,-.- . 1 n .l 14, ju. Snow-munching mountain Jtreamf drain winter of the edge of the world nurturing a loneyome teething daixy. Spring unburrowf, budf, begin! to pulfate, keeping time with an uncertain niglotlarkk monologue. x x ...Jug XSL- JL Kicking, barking, wailing, bumming, Simmering, Jbimmering to the brim and 0ver,' Shy, IM, wry, Blitbely, litbely-tbe bert tbing about Jpring If tba! it all bafppenf- Loudly, proudly. , 3 ,v fl February 27 , 1967 To : Seniors Re : 100 Days Party A reminder is given that the 100 Days Party should not be a source of disciplinary difficulty. S incere ly , F pf CRev James F. Barryz, SX Dean of Men F. D.BL mf ,anus IVK Pwr tif' r 1 I I I., W - -Q 4 ff .,- .Jf ,lx Q . .M f .v -X Q , 1' ' .., 1 4 +' 1 , 4-v K,- if 5 J, V-QUIK x'w,Ww 1 I mul 'N ' We It . Win .. 5 'M 5 4 'R X . . 'w uv Oat to exercife, oat to Nady, oat to avoid the withdrawal Jymptomx of late winter. The College if imiile oat. Four wall: are four too many for Jtaaferizf Jtrang oat on the lawm waiting for the narcoyiy of opiate Jpring. e. f L 5 I if , W Z' A3-1: Ay - up -xi ' fi 'PT fHf'f, f1ci' .1 I ,gf-,, X ,F .I 43.15 ..ffk.:. rss 3 T , , 4, J in 'gf gigfx 4:t,.'1,g:t'f:m,q-i' ,v4XIs? Q. .--,M x'-'W-' 'ww-1 K - vp ' . - .1 y ., '-.f-me V 51-QQ ' is-,' .2 f.i,1.! Nf?-L1.,j ,'- ,f-djf3'e13',,5gff,x.,A Han - -31 ,1 ggi, M ' Bw Til- i. sf.,,M'- gif 1 ,. V , ,,z.?-zqgmq QNNAS. 2 ,if if ,, f' as ei., asa..-s.1ii-Loi, A54 ' 221-P- A V' ,ye - if 5 --.Wife -225' X gk 3' Yfglif-f'f'1f,', N , -, E- Y 1 .1 '. -1 , V - 4: 3 .. N-, f:,- - ,l j L -- '93 +f '? fm3i5' S irw ,- ff QNX '-R541-H' ' ffl: M44 in Q xv rif siwr . AHS. 'i,'5ff I H' , sv l if -: ew . A. ff l ...a,H:c f-1 '-'bf ' Q o 445, t Y , ,. I x.-1 .X v ,, -, ,HK 'Q 3 ,I V , ,. . Q3-., -vi n, .L 1 . f. 'esgi3 A wi' .- 2' eff , v 7 -'-'f-I . 31 i,. iff' A A on e- if - A M: wk w-' f 1 f H 1 'sux Y f - -L ,F - fi- 'Q -4 .. - .. 5, 'S--rx Y W, .3 . ', . A ' My Q , X AM- Q25 ,Q iq ,A A W 1. A MXN: ... .ive-, V ,i . wr .rl V A, . ii!!-if ., ' - 'filif -45 '19, iii 5.-fi? 7'5: 'sl tbiafyixif' W- L-,fQJ.,,.v if ,jr . 41lygij'l ii fn -' 8W'lF'. 'IKQM9' . -fig K - , .Fifty ' 'lg-FWQAL.. . .- l ., Y l. ,. Effljshglsvfygggg. . X AQ!?55i 'iqifff-5? ' K 5 x+.iwyiL, .' - 2 Q, Sim-'X ma.. x-A or J if- .. if- 1 f.R'. 2-433 --N - - U f' Z Q 1 N. x NJ' I 9 A 5 1 i 1 1' 1 if-1 'Q- ff, 'S-37? ,J LS' if - -1- ' A .-,.'2ay. Se-'--AR' - 1- W-,,,:,-x, ,Q ja'-.-f.: '-Jypg 7-1' 5,43 '3M,.f-QfF'i,q' Q - -b .:,,s,g54' 1 .J L-9 .-jfgg 'S' tVf 'B :'-3 -. 5:.'. 'g'?'-I f Q '. f V- - XT'11,4.f'- bid 1: -'fa' V -, ' , ?2 f,w f'1'f-3Se.Q--?g,-'g:f'Q'.s ' 'fET - M-if --322755:- ' V 2' , v. , , . X- ., -- ' '-15:5 - riff? l . ,S , -5. 55 , ,z-aw. N Q-1. -- ' rw -.rf ff f'?IB?st3d'f,l'2'?- 9' '-Ziff! '-1-I , . ah' ? 'mg x' ,gig ' . 5 lagged 5 :53. gjig C ' -If .aff S ' ,, rl, Y- Li, Lf. . ,QQQQEA L . . -S., 1, uid,-'bi1lQv ,gf-. '1.,b. x ,wfxgxq 1 . .. ww-.,g g-.1: .fs U' .5 'A-1-irf rf' wi 191' f N14 QOL' QI -'civil' fs 4?-..-' - - ' V-n c ' .. if i,v.J- 9 ,, ., 543 l ' V J Q ,M-,L-v. ,13 . z X , -71 .tw . 'Anvil . 4 ffl? 'S KN 'win .wg X N A In 1-. in-Ml Q , 1 1 .K d, 'I I 4 1 'X N Q i Studief got you down? Feel like climhing the wully? Cheer up. The .rolution lief jun' outxicie your door . . . ahout three feet deep. ,HR i f l gd' J ik , 95' ' P.-gn , . 5- , . ' I -4 - Nl' D I ,-wg. .- f9:'Qu A I A I. I Q 1. :Ml 5. IP' r 1 1. . L -gf', . ' S !. - J'-. 1 . f'-I . if- 94... '. l 1 . 1 f 'r. 52 as .' Q' .- P 'xg f, - .ff ' , he .525 'TSE ei r1- .WY Q' ' fi .-Jgg, ' , . J K2 r f' I E. . .. 'ffza ' . , if ' 'if' - -9' 'lf 'AT '1,: wg: -!.'x'f-' I I 'if A . 1' ,X 3 'FQ ,ff wf t 4--. I he- :a4 Y . 3 ,' , . W , ,E , R 1 :fs . . ' - 9 ,519 -. '- 'S ,,', ' ' K ,iiwf 1714319 f ' U 'f'f4' ,z .3 44 : 4 1 .r 4 4 Ja, : we f aufs' 1- -134' ffl. ' ...iL,.', .. Qfg: '.4,'?J4 ' -Ma? if-'r if ,11'Ef .1 if 4 , f .,?: - IT! -'. . A V., qy axial.. t:':i. -' ,v:lJ.'.,, Ag ,Eat '.. '31, i, . S1 -', g' V4' J:,'..' 4 - . fm. 4l'.' ' 4-'73 PM . '56 ' 1 - up-.. -1 ff - ,iw QQ' ' L' -.J-' lzdvfzvj IW, ' .afJ. 1 !1'k't'W' 'q 5 0'.'1.S' z,.,4'l'.:f -l:'Y- ' Y ' 'Xais A :.'4:HA? L. ,'. W ' W' vf xr - I' g T, ,gil HMI., . ' I' ,, I s -4 -Q, IO. . u- , , 'vs .- l,. fluff. T qt ,5 ,af i' f :riff ,'. ig '1 rf ,fn 'f 'Q AQ -'?1,'1 'H-1. 5' , . .V 4 . I, '..1,- 4,1 Natural grace clreyfed np in formal black tie, .feqninetl Jbeatla. Partly theatrical, partly fictional, gilding a frame to leave a perfect inzpreffion in. -Bon fuinant, fanolr-faire, homo riclen: freely tranflated. I RQ,- , -iif fr A K' v 3, .3 et' 1 1 G , A lxtg 1th 11 .13 9 9 L7 11 guxfactur-23 VXL . -f1LmvHf1'XC QOQHQ iqueurg Fun ad lib, laugh ridden, duncerx in the Jtreet, duncery panting under the jire of drurnf. Stuccuto to iz crefcendo then u puuye. Ember: of the Jun Jhudow goodbyex murmured through conuexed lipx. Ending iz beginning, beginning an ending. w m Q 'X G M!- VH' --3 di. ,-,. up p. ...W-1 A .if .,- ...fluff- ' f. .. - Qi .,. no .- .. , ,' -uw-,, -. V' Q . My LJ, J. .,, , . ,h . X .fx ?1 fE,,f .M ,W .-- ' P ' X-UU T415 1-A., -'. 1-..-- I ' fl' L -K - - 4 fe as ' , ,'. .. , .W .J 48- A ' , px T, .M .w ' ' B-rf' Vw lk-A 5 ,J NA,-' '41 Ml.,-35 f U? -MIS 7-f+' W' A' an ' 1-.sm-f . A. Q 'N' , , wie ' 'N 4 -4.-.df d 'A'1.. ,, ff' r ,Wi 'Q ,. '27, Q ,vw f v '.. , W 'Nan . - x 1,-f, ,, . 4 -, 4 In .M 44 .... 4... '- 4' ,Ma ., M '- , .., ,.,.. :ff Q -1,44 uname .... - vm maui' Luau' Mani'- f .-. -.-. vlthwnqwcdg. may -'nik 'Ubin-nf ' B' 'Zi 4-s . 1 , ,L--w..,,..e-an. ' 9 -,-'. --an JS Moftly itir people. Beer, beach, girlx, of courfe a beautiful day. But it'J the people, in Jwarrnfg blanket open- ing, tab-top popping, nudging, bumping, laughing people. People pufhing people into Quinfig pond. People difmiffing the :un with a tliftracting driving beat .flappecl on an axphalt floor. And there were, naturally, the crew racex. I , Q f go ' sv D' -Qu., awg-Q2?p A +J3L fan. - I-u 1 It teeters precariouyly in the D.0. Only the purple letterf Olympic Stanclingf' give an approximate meaning zo the long quadruple row of numbery. Before you even notice it, if: half over. And, infirm- ary lifty notwitbytanding, if: all for i ' in -'-2: ' f x x 'La-.-1 .K Yr ,N ,..4 - , -. 1 . , -J , .3 I 4 . - .X .ian 21 x ,Q -'Im ' is .. . if . ,.' ,ig-1'v, ! W? ,, 'H ,:. ' g The calm of a Jpring evening brings ont the baritone in man. Librettist and com- poxer anxionxly joined word and Jonncl to pleafe the rnoft yaoage beaft. Gala premiere. Libretto: remain, enxbrined on granite fbelvef. Savage beaft: becalnzed. SY af 'Y 27 4 5 aww wi 3, gr. wl s ,N . H K if ,, x 4 S 9 Q ' 5 - 4 -H31 WA? gm v wg ,W f2,. 7f iff 1? 49 5' ,N W -rx X xv af si.- 4' . an . 4 ff is V 1 'Q' X 3 '. A . 'Q .. 1' .U ti, 7 if Q - f sf, . -s, 1 3. '. s M ,V vw , K .f 1 x 8 'Jax wi an Swv L8 in 'g 'pt N , Q. Q, yawn, ' v , Q . .wk sf' g e. . Q .' 1 1 ywd, .J' Si ' ' a QQ 'ix r N .mt 1 'fiv Q' k .' K by .VKXI 4? '4 3 ,. K Q ski ' ' H . -5 R A 1 1 nf' ' iq ..iA 'ig' 3 X Q max . V' 1 N . fx, . 2? 1 lg txt- . W -gig nr-,H ,N 9 IQ ,QA-.. Q , A .Q ' in fi 1. f g4'f 1 ff Q ' yi',,. A35 'lx lf' ' AQ ! -as Q- ty. A H45 :- ' . W Aa, X I QB 'iv O 1 1. 5 1 . A VW 1 4' 1' fe, J Y . K ss . ,f 5' , p ,, i . Y. qs? f .W J ff -Q1 4 ,+ L, .1 ,231 ,,,,, 'iiw L ' .,, 9 43. , - ta hz . ' .. . ,A -f+,9df'. 'Wu R 'zjiG'Ai'y rx Kayi. Q -ff fm'-,ai -? 'J S l 2 K tal' ,!' A multiple Iwo Jima vignette, pulling infteail of pmhing, iz hanfer rope inyteacl of iz flag, .rtretchetl taut between the forcef of clay: pride and peryonal honor, the lug of war. More than iz contest played within a graffy arrtphitheater, it hecorney a competition no one and everyone winx. Became they try their heyt. 5334 4' Q-5 V- . df' X 4 4 4 I I , ..,,.. A 5,1 ,, -f,.. . ., .' ,. Aaifl' mf Q. JJ , kv, ' 11-.'-., ---- ---- '1 ,..x .f ,S Li up Ju. -0' 1 3 rw 1 x 5 Q 2 I Qffiii f w if Kgs ,v A Q S '42-J N. '. Mastering tbexe, they mmter tbemselfuex vw 5 . -,, 'a mx N OV - -1 ....,,, . , w 'g53f7.g,fgwu,k: 'W V WM ,Ji ,N if e Bat Jtill, it'y alwayy there, the in- vitation, the chance. Cnt the cord, leave it all behind, tornorrovfx another clay and whatever it if, it can wait. -f ' 'Xq'1, . f'h5:m' A- e ' 'G -' 'W s1e'Y'f'f:'f: he ' 1' 11 ,.r,. .vyfjf P195-. fbi, I -l -.,'.,' 3. . 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